Tanmay Mishra

2papers

2 Papers

7.8SYApr 1
Maximizing Power Flexibility of Hybrid Energy Systems for Capacity Market

Tanmay Mishra, Mads R Almassalkhi

Hybrid Energy Systems (HES), integrating generation sources, energy storage, and controllable loads, are well-positioned to provide real-time grid flexibility. However, quantifying this maximum flexibility is challenging due to renewable generation uncertainty and the complexity of power allocation across multiple assets in real time. This paper presents a rule-based framework for characterizing HES flexibility and systematically allocating power among its constituent assets. The flexibility envelope defines the dynamic power boundary within which the HES can inject or absorb power without violating operational constraints. Shaped in real time by capacity bids, available solar generation, and power allocation protocol, it enables reliable and predictable HES participation in regulation markets. Depending on the operational objective, the framework supports both symmetric and asymmetric flexibility cases. Further, the proposed power-allocation rule is benchmarked against an optimal dispatch, providing a performance reference under realistic conditions. Finally, state of charge drift correction control is presented to ensure sustained battery operation and system reliability. This work, therefore, offers a rigorous and practical framework for integrating HES into capacity markets through effective flexibility characterization.

IVFeb 14, 2022
A Graphical Approach For Brain Haemorrhage Segmentation

Ninad Mehendale, Pragya Gupta, Nishant Rajadhyaksha et al.

Haemorrhaging of the brain is the leading cause of death in people between the ages of 15 and 24 and the third leading cause of death in people older than that. Computed tomography (CT) is an imaging modality used to diagnose neurological emergencies, including stroke and traumatic brain injury. Recent advances in Deep Learning and Image Processing have utilised different modalities like CT scans to help automate the detection and segmentation of brain haemorrhage occurrences. In this paper, we propose a novel implementation of an architecture consisting of traditional Convolutional Neural Networks(CNN) along with Graph Neural Networks(GNN) to produce a holistic model for the task of brain haemorrhage segmentation.GNNs work on the principle of neighbourhood aggregation thus providing a reliable estimate of global structures present in images. GNNs work with few layers thus in turn requiring fewer parameters to work with. We were able to achieve a dice coefficient score of around 0.81 with limited data with our implementation.