16 resultados para Grid connected PV-plants
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Energias Renováveis – Conversão Eléctrica e Utilização Sustentáveis
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The definition and programming of distributed applications has become a major research issue due to the increasing availability of (large scale) distributed platforms and the requirements posed by the economical globalization. However, such a task requires a huge effort due to the complexity of the distributed environments: large amount of users may communicate and share information across different authority domains; moreover, the “execution environment” or “computations” are dynamic since the number of users and the computational infrastructure change in time. Grid environments, in particular, promise to be an answer to deal with such complexity, by providing high performance execution support to large amount of users, and resource sharing across different organizations. Nevertheless, programming in Grid environments is still a difficult task. There is a lack of high level programming paradigms and support tools that may guide the application developer and allow reusability of state-of-the-art solutions. Specifically, the main goal of the work presented in this thesis is to contribute to the simplification of the development cycle of applications for Grid environments by bringing structure and flexibility to three stages of that cycle through a commonmodel. The stages are: the design phase, the execution phase, and the reconfiguration phase. The common model is based on the manipulation of patterns through pattern operators, and the division of both patterns and operators into two categories, namely structural and behavioural. Moreover, both structural and behavioural patterns are first class entities at each of the aforesaid stages. At the design phase, patterns can be manipulated like other first class entities such as components. This allows a more structured way to build applications by reusing and composing state-of-the-art patterns. At the execution phase, patterns are units of execution control: it is possible, for example, to start or stop and to resume the execution of a pattern as a single entity. At the reconfiguration phase, patterns can also be manipulated as single entities with the additional advantage that it is possible to perform a structural reconfiguration while keeping some of the behavioural constraints, and vice-versa. For example, it is possible to replace a behavioural pattern, which was applied to some structural pattern, with another behavioural pattern. In this thesis, besides the proposal of the methodology for distributed application development, as sketched above, a definition of a relevant set of pattern operators was made. The methodology and the expressivity of the pattern operators were assessed through the development of several representative distributed applications. To support this validation, a prototype was designed and implemented, encompassing some relevant patterns and a significant part of the patterns operators defined. This prototype was based in the Triana environment; Triana supports the development and deployment of distributed applications in the Grid through a dataflow-based programming model. Additionally, this thesis also presents the analysis of a mapping of some operators for execution control onto the Distributed Resource Management Application API (DRMAA). This assessment confirmed the suitability of the proposed model, as well as the generality and flexibility of the defined pattern operators
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Este trabalho foi realizado sob orientação do Prof. António Brandão Moniz para a disciplina “Factores Sociais da Inovação” do Mestrado Engenharia Informática realizado na Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Portugal)
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Dissertação submetida como requisito parcial para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de Computadores
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XX Symposium of Brazilian Medicinal Plants & X International Congress of Ethnopharmacology. S. Paulo, Brasil.
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The section at Cristo Rei shows sandy beds with intercalated clayey lenses (IVb division from the Lisbon Miocene series) that correspond to a major regression event dated from between ca. 17.6 and 17 Ma. They also correspond to a distal position (relatively to the typical fluviatile facies in Lisbon), nearer the basin's axis. Geologic data and paleontological analysis (plant fossils, fishes, crocodilians, land mammals) allow the reconstruction of environments that were represented in the concerned area: estuary with channels and ox-bows; upstream, areas occupied by brackish waters where Gryphaea griphoides banks developped; still farther upstream, freshwaters sided by humid forests and low mountain subtropical forests under warm temperate and rainy conditions, as well as not far away, seasonally dry environments (low density tree or shrub cover, or steppe).
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Dissertação apresentada para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Sistemas de Informação Industriais, Engenharia Electrotécnica, pela Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia
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Dissertation presented to obtain the degree of Doctorate in Biochemistry by Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica of Universidade Nova de Lisboa
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A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sanitary Engineering in the Faculty of Sciences and Technology of the New University of Lisbon
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Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de Computadores
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Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Biochemistry
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Thesis submitted to obtain the Doctoral degree in Energy and Bioenergy
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Nowadays, reducing energy consumption is one of the highest priorities and biggest challenges faced worldwide and in particular in the industrial sector. Given the increasing trend of consumption and the current economical crisis, identifying cost reductions on the most energy-intensive sectors has become one of the main concerns among companies and researchers. Particularly in industrial environments, energy consumption is affected by several factors, namely production factors(e.g. equipments), human (e.g. operators experience), environmental (e.g. temperature), among others, which influence the way of how energy is used across the plant. Therefore, several approaches for identifying consumption causes have been suggested and discussed. However, the existing methods only provide guidelines for energy consumption and have shown difficulties in explaining certain energy consumption patterns due to the lack of structure to incorporate context influence, hence are not able to track down the causes of consumption to a process level, where optimization measures can actually take place. This dissertation proposes a new approach to tackle this issue, by on-line estimation of context-based energy consumption models, which are able to map operating context to consumption patterns. Context identification is performed by regression tree algorithms. Energy consumption estimation is achieved by means of a multi-model architecture using multiple RLS algorithms, locally estimated for each operating context. Lastly, the proposed approach is applied to a real cement plant grinding circuit. Experimental results prove the viability of the overall system, regarding both automatic context identification and energy consumption estimation.
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No sentido de diminuir a dependência externa de energia nomeadamente de combustíveis fósseis, combater as alterações climáticas e colmatar o défice potencial de energia associada à dependência de energia hídrica, Portugal necessita aumentar o investimento noutras fontes de energia renovável (FER) para produção de eletricidade, nomeadamente na energia solar. Sendo uma das zonas com maior radiação solar da Europa (1 900 kWh/m2), Portugal não aproveita este recurso como poderia. O presente estudo avalia o potencial técnico de produção de energia solar fotovoltaica centralizado de larga escala (> 1 MW), no Concelho de Évora. Recorrendo ao sistema de informação geográfica ArcGIS, foram estimadas as áreas disponíveis e as áreas úteis potenciais para implementação de projetos de aproveitamento de energia solar fotovoltaica, por forma a calcular o potencial de potência instalada (MW) e de produção de energia elétrica (GWh/ano). Foram considerados diferentes cenários relativos ao uso do solo, no contexto do Plano Diretor Municipal, e ao tipo de projeto, tendo sido consideradas as tecnologias de sistema fotovoltaico sem concentração (PV) e de sistema fotovoltaico concentrado (CPV). No cenário mais restritivo sobre a ocupação do solo foi estimada uma área útil de 4 978 ha (cerca de 4% da área total do Município) que corresponde a um potencial técnico de produção de energia de 2 357 GWh/ano, se se considerar um sistema CPV com 1 MW de potência instalada. Para efeitos de comparação, esta produção corresponde a 9 vezes o valor do consumo de eletricidade anual do Concelho de Évora e a cerca de 5% do consumo anual de eletricidade em Portugal continental em 2012. O potencial muito significativo de produção de eletricidade solar é justificada pela disponibilidade de ocupação do solo, pelo declive suave do terreno e pelo excelente nível de radiação solar incidente. Da análise dos diversos cenários avaliados, concluiu-se que o sistema mais vantajoso, em termos de produção de energia por unidade de área, independentemente do cenário de ocupação do solo, é o sistema CPV de larga escala (20 a 30 MW) que apresenta valores de produção da ordem de 0,64 GWh/ha.
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Scarcity of fuels, changes in environmental policy and in society increased the interest in generating electric energy from renewable energy sources (RES) for a sustainable energy supply in the future. The main problem of RES as solar and wind energy, which represent a main pillar of this transition, is that they cannot supply constant power output. This results inter alia in an increased demand of backup technologies as batteries to assure electricity system safety. The diffusion of energy storage technologies is highly dependent on the energy system and transport transition pathways which might lead to a replacement or reconfiguration of embedded socio-technical practices and regimes (by creating new standards or dominant designs, changing regulations, infrastructure and user patterns). The success of this technology is dependent on hardly predictable future technical advances, actor preferences, development of competing technologies and designs, diverging interests of actors, future cost efficiencies, environmental performance, the evolution of market demand and design and evolution of our society.