Method and Apparatus for Operating a Balancing Method for a Stationary Battery Storage Means

20240047977 ยท 2024-02-08

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method for operating an energy supply system having a stationary battery storage device includes operating the energy supply system and recording a chronological profile of an energy flow from the battery storage device and providing data points respectively indicative of a low-load duration and a timepoint within a period, wherein the low-load duration is indicative of a duration during which the amount of energy flow into or out of the battery storage device falls below a specified threshold. The method includes creating or further developing a data-based model based on the data points provided, wherein the data-based model is designed to determine at least one most likely timepoint within the period at which a balancing method can be performed without premature termination, and performing the balancing method at the at least one most likely timepoint.

    Claims

    1. A method for operating an energy supply system having a stationary battery storage device, comprising: operating the energy supply system and recording a chronological profile of an energy flow from the battery storage device; providing data points respectively indicative of a low-load duration and a timepoint within a period, wherein the low-load duration is indicative of a duration during which an amount of the energy flow into or out of the battery storage device falls below a specified threshold; creating or further developing a data-based model based on the data points provided, wherein the data-based model is designed to determine at least one likely timepoint within the period at which a balancing method can be performed without premature termination; and performing the balancing method at the at least one likely timepoint.

    2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the balancing method is performed based upon blocked energy flows from or to the battery storage device.

    3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the balancing method is performed based upon exceeding a scattering threshold with scattering of states of charge of battery cells of the battery storage device.

    4. The method according to claim 1, wherein: the data-based model comprises a clustering method; the provided data points are clustered; each cluster is associated with a starting timepoint for starting a balancing method; and the starting timepoint of each cluster corresponds to a centroid of the respective cluster.

    5. The method according to claim 4, wherein the balancing method is performed according to a specified chronological scheme for as long as a number of data points in the cluster with the highest number of data points falls below a specified frequency threshold.

    6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the at least one likely timepoint is defined as a time of day and a day of the week.

    7. The method according to claim 1, wherein; data points are provided only for low-load events having a low-load duration over a specified minimum duration; and the specified minimum duration is determined depending on an average balancing duration of a balancing operation.

    8. The method according to claim 1, wherein; the at least one likely timepoint comprises a most likely timepoint at which the balancing method can be performed without premature termination; and performing the balancing method comprises performing the balancing method at the most likely timepoint at which the balancing method can be performed without premature termination.

    9. An apparatus for operating an energy supply system having a stationary battery storage device, wherein the apparatus is designed to: operate the energy supply system and detect a chronological profile of an energy flow from the battery storage device; provide data points respectively indicative of a low-load duration and a timepoint within a period, wherein the low-load duration is indicative of a duration during which the amount of energy flow into or out of the battery storage device falls below a specified threshold; create or further develop a data-based model based on the provided data points, wherein the data-based model is designed to determine at least one most likely timepoint within the period at which a balancing method can be performed without premature termination; and perform the balancing method at one or multiple timepoints within the period that results according to the data-based model as the at least one most likely timepoint at which a balancing method can be performed without premature termination.

    10. A computer program product comprising commands that, when the program is executed by at least one data processing device, cause the at least one data processing device to perform the method according to claim 1.

    11. A machine-readable storage medium comprising commands that, when executed by at least one data processing device, cause the at least one data processing device to perform the method according to claim 1.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0035] Embodiments are explained in greater detail hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings. Shown are:

    [0036] FIG. 1 a schematic illustration of an energy system for a building having a stationary battery storage means and a photovoltaic system acting as a regenerative energy source;

    [0037] FIG. 2 a diagram illustrating a chronological scheme of the energy flows for a building equipped with a photovoltaic system connected to the public supply network 7;

    [0038] FIG. 3 a flowchart illustrating a method for operating the energy supply system of FIG. 2; and

    [0039] FIG. 4 a schematic diagram for determining clusters for suitable timepoints for starting a balancing method.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0040] FIG. 1 shows a schematic representation of a building energy supply system as an example of a local energy supply system 1 for a building 4. The energy supply system comprises a stationary battery storage means 2 and a regenerative energy source 3, e.g., in the form of a photovoltaic system. One or multiple electrical consumers 5 are located in the building 4, which can be supplied with electrical energy from the stationary battery storage means via an internal supply network 6. In addition, the building 4 can be in communication with a public power supply network 7. The internal supply network 6, the battery storage means 2, and the public supply network 7 can communicate with one another via an inverter 8 used for controlling energy flows.

    [0041] The energy flows in the energy supply system 1 are controlled via a control unit 9, so that electrical energy from the regenerative energy source 3 is preferably used by the consumers 5 in the building 4. If an excess of energy is available from the regenerative energy source 3, it is preferably stored in the stationary battery storage means 2 and only supplied to the public supply network 8 upon full charging of the stationary battery storage means 2. If no energy is available from the regenerative energy source 3, then the electrical energy from the stationary battery storage means 2 is first used before the energy supply from the public supply network 7 is used.

    [0042] For example, a common chronological scheme of the energy flows for a building 4 equipped with a photovoltaic system connected to the public supply network 7 is shown in FIG. 2. The power consumption V is shown as a dashed line V and the availability of electrical energy from the regenerative energy source 3 is shown as a solid line P. The surface areas indicate the areas with the energy quantities used for charging the battery (area L), feeding into the public supply network 7 (area E), drawing energy from the public supply network 7 (area B), and self-consumption (area S) from the stationary battery storage means 2. This diagram can be different for different households and building uses, so an individual operating strategy must be provided.

    [0043] The flowchart of FIG. 3 shows a sequence of a possible method for operating the energy supply system 1 with respect to performing a balancing method for the stationary battery storage means 2. The balancing method provides an alignment of the states of charge of battery cells of stationary battery storage means 2 by discharging battery cells at a higher state of charge than the minimum state of charge of one of the battery cells via a corresponding balancing resistor until the states of charge of all battery cells are aligned. By way of example, the balancing method provided herein is intended to be performed once or twice per week.

    [0044] In step S1, the energy supply system 1 is operated in accordance with a specified operating strategy. This strategy can generally provide that electrical energy from the regenerative energy source, e.g. the photovoltaic system, is used with the highest priority, the energy from the stationary battery storage means 2 is used with secondary priority, and the electrical energy from the public supply network 7 is used with the last priority.

    [0045] In step S2, the balancing method is performed in a specified chronological scheme and/or depending on the excess of a scattering threshold of a scattering of states of charge of battery cells of the battery storage means 2. For example, in the event of a scattering of the states of charge of more than 5% between maximum and minimum state of charge of the individual battery cells, a balancing operation can be started.

    [0046] In step S3, the energy flows are continuously monitored and, in particular, the energy flow from the stationary battery storage means 2 into the internal supply network 6 is determined.

    [0047] Chronological phases are determined during which the energy flow from the stationary battery storage means falls below a specified threshold. The low-load duration during which this state is consistently maintained is also determined. The low-load duration ends at the timepoint of the specified threshold being exceeded by the flow of energy from the stationary battery storage means 2. If the low-load duration exceeds a specified minimum duration, then a data point is generated that is determined by the starting timepoint of the low-load duration as the time of day and day of week and the amount of the low-load duration. The variables of the data point then serve as inputs for a data-based model. The minimum duration selection is based on the balancing duration required for ending a balancing method and can be, e.g., 60 minutes, or in particular 1.5 times the average balancing duration.

    [0048] At specified time intervals, in step S4, the data points determined from the operation of the energy supply system are analyzed according to a clustering method in order to determine clusters of frequencies of the data points. As a possible clustering method, k-means can be used in which the number k is determined, e.g., by means of an elbow method.

    [0049] In step S5, the resulting clusters are checked and the number of data points per cluster is monitored for a specified frequency threshold. If the number of data points of at least one cluster exceeds the specified frequency threshold (alternative: yes), step S6 switches over to a schedule determined by the data-based model for performing the balancing methods. Otherwise, the previous mode of operation is maintained by jumping back to step S1.

    [0050] During the further operation, the data-based model is accordingly continuously further developed so that further data points are added. At specified timepoints, the above clustering method is respectively performed in order to determine corresponding clusters with frequencies of data points.

    [0051] In step S6, the schedule for performing the balancing method is determined to be one or multiple weekly timepoints corresponding to a specified balancing frequency by evaluating the data-based model. A number of clusters with the greatest number of data points are selected according to the balancing frequency. Thus, the cluster with the most data points, the cluster with the second most data points, etc., can be selected depending on whether a balancing method is to be performed once, twice, etc. per week.

    [0052] With their centroids, the selected clusters provide the starting timepoint for a balancing operation, i.e., the day of the week and time of day assigned to the centroid.

    [0053] In FIG. 4, the result of a clustering method is shown by way of example. Clusters are shown with a plurality of data points, each indicative of the low-load duration D, the time of day T, and the day of the week W of a detected low-load event. In the illustrated example, a cluster C1 with a number of data points can be discerned, the centroid of which specifies the weekly timepoint Mondays 8:00 AM at a low-load duration of 80 min, and a cluster C2 with a number of data points, the centroid of which specifies the weekly timepoint Friday 11:00 PM at a duration of 70 min. The shaded surface is indicative of the surface area representing the threshold for the low-load duration. A balancing method is not intended to be started for clusters that are below this surface, as the duration until the threshold is exceeded by the amount of energy flow is probably not sufficient to end the balancing method.

    [0054] In step S7, the energy supply system is operated in the manner described above, in which case the balancing operations are started at the starting timepoints determined by the data-based model.

    [0055] In addition to performing the balancing method at the timepoint determined using the data-based model, a monitoring of the scattering of the states of charge can be performed, so that if the scattering of the states of charge is too large, a balancing method is to be started regardless of the timepoint(s) determined by the data-based model.