Blockchain Based Transactive Energy Systems for Voltage Regulation
This work addresses the need for auditable and enforceable voltage regulation in electric power systems, offering a domain-specific solution that is incremental by integrating blockchain with existing mechanisms.
The paper tackles the problem of incentivizing and enforcing voltage regulation services in transactive energy systems by proposing a blockchain-based approach that uses reputation ratings and smart contracts, achieving effective voltage mitigation in both simulated and real-world active distribution networks.
Transactive Energy Systems (TES) are modern mechanisms in electric power systems that allow disparate control agents to utilize distributed generation units (DGs) to engage in energy transactions and provide ancillary services to the grid. Although voltage regulation is a crucial ancillary service within active distribution networks (ADNs), previous work has not adequately explored how this service can be offered in terms of its incentivization, contract auditability and enforcement. Blockchain technology shows promise in being a key enabler of TES, allowing agents to engage in trustless, persistent transactions that are both enforceable and auditable. To that end, this paper proposes a blockchain based TES that enables agents to receive incentives for providing voltage regulation services by i) maintaining an auditable reputation rating for each agent that is increased proportionately with each mitigation of a voltage violation, ii) utilizing smart contracts to enforce the validity of each transaction and penalize reputation ratings in case of a mitigation failure and iii) automating the negotiation and bidding of agent services by implementing the contract net protocol (CNP) as a smart contract. Experimental results on both simulated and real-world ADNs are executed to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed system.