SYSYMay 13

Battery-Assisted Operation of Hyperscale AI Data Centers under Connect-and-Manage Interconnection Practices

arXiv:2605.1410569.2
Predicted impact top 1% in SY · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For operators of hyperscale AI data centers facing strict grid interconnection limits, this work provides a method to enhance operational feasibility and efficiency.

This paper proposes a battery-assisted operational framework for hyperscale AI data centers to manage conflicts between workload continuity and time-varying interconnection limits under connect-and-manage practices. Case studies show that battery energy storage substantially increases credible day-ahead workload commitment and improves real-time delivery robustness under transmission congestion.

Emerging connect-and-manage practices allow new transmission-connected mega-loads to connect while enforcing time-varying admissible power exchange limits at the point of common coupling (PCC) in real time. Hyperscale artificial intelligence data centers (AIDCs), whose demand can reach hundreds of megawatts and whose internal computing-cooling dynamics evolve rapidly, can therefore face frequent conflicts between workload continuity requirements and externally imposed PCC envelopes. This paper proposes a battery-assisted operational framework in which on-site battery energy storage (BESS) serves as a physical buffering interface to reconcile fast internal dynamics with time-varying interconnection limits. A continuity-aware energy-computation model is developed to jointly capture checkpoint-constrained AI training workloads, information technology (IT) computing power-throughput characteristics, and IT-cooling thermal dynamics. A two-stage decision framework is then formulated, consisting of scenario-based day-ahead workload commitment and a real-time receding-horizon delivery assurance controller that enforces battery, thermal, and grid-interaction constraints. Case studies on the IEEE 39-bus system with Australian real data demonstrate that BESS substantially increases credible day-ahead workload commitment and improves real-time delivery robustness under transmission congestion. Sensitivity analyses further reveal a regime-dependent role transition of BESS -- from feasibility-oriented continuity support when PCC limits are binding to economy-driven flexibility provision as transmission constraints are relaxed.

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