Print Email Facebook Twitter DC Grid Design Title DC Grid Design: Distribution of the electricity grid of a tiny house community Author Kluge, Paul (TU Delft Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science) Richter, Jesse (TU Delft Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science) Contributor Vergara Barrios, P.P. (mentor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Date 2021-06-30 Abstract This thesis covers the toplevel design of a DC microgrid of a tiny house community on the roof ofa highrise building in Rotterdam. This DC microgrid consists of 12 tiny houses, a common usagearea, Renewable Energy Supply (RES) methods, using solar and wind energy, and an Energy Storagesystem (ESS). This design is part of a complete DC smart grid for such a community with two othersubgroups focusing on the control and software, theCNSgroup, and power line communication, thePLCgroup.In this thesis, three design phases are discussed; demand estimation, storage & supply design, andtopology design. Subsequently, the resulting grid design is validated. The first phase resulted in anestimation of hourly, daily, and monthly energy usage. Using a model of the generation, 61.2푚2PhotoVoltaic (PV) panels and 6 Vertical Axis Wind Turbines (VAWT)s were selected. In order to handle thevarying energy generation of theRESs, differentESSoptions are considered, and 4 LiIon batteriesare chosen. This combination of storage and supply resulted in a grid availability of 93.73%. In thelast design phase, the topology of the community is designed, which resulted in a 400 VDC unipolar ring-based series connected multibus configuration, which effectively operates in radial form to reduce complexity and enables easier fault location detection. The topology design also considers theconverter requirements, wiring, and stability and safety considerations. A cost analysis is made ofthe entire grid resulting in an estimated total cost of around €100,000. Lastly, design verification isperformed on the proposed design, which resulted in functional results during 100% demand, with amaximum voltage drop of 1.82% and during 150% demand, with a maximum voltage drop of 2.80%. Subject DCMicrogridTiny houseCommunitySustainability To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:d200fbbf-973e-4207-8fb5-a5b747ee059d Part of collection Student theses Document type bachelor thesis Rights © 2021 Paul Kluge, Jesse Richter Files PDF DCG_Design_Final_Thesis.pdf 2.07 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:d200fbbf-973e-4207-8fb5-a5b747ee059d/datastream/OBJ/view