Resumen:
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Interactive simulation in Matlab of the payment for contracted power and maximum power consumed in a load curve with a three-period tariff. In electricity rates with three periods (such as 3.0A or 3.1A), the payment to be ...[+]
Interactive simulation in Matlab of the payment for contracted power and maximum power consumed in a load curve with a three-period tariff. In electricity rates with three periods (such as 3.0A or 3.1A), the payment to be made in the power term reflects the cost of the contracted power and the maximum power demand in a given rate period. The price of kW is defined in the contract, nevertheless, the amount to be paid from one month to another can be very different. What does this difference depend on? Actually, the cost of this concept of the invoice is calculated by multiplying the price of the kW established in the contract for each period by the billable power. Thus, there are three possibilities depending on the monthly demand for each period.
1.- If the maximum average quarter-hourly demand of the month, in a given period, is less than 85% of the contracted power, the billable power is 85% of the contracted power for that period.
2.- If the maximum average quarter-hourly of the month, in a certain period, is between 85% and 105% of the contracted power, the billable power is exactly the maximum power demanded in that period.
3.- Finally, if 105% of the contracted power is exceeded in a period, there is a significant surcharge on the bill, since the billable power is calculated as the maximum power demanded plus twice the difference between this value and 105% of the maximum power contracted in said period.
In this laboratory, various demand profiles for a real day of buildings in the tertiary sector have been included to analyze what happens in each of the two seasons of the year (winter time and summer time), depending on the maximum demanded power, the contracted powers and the prices of the power in each period.
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Descripción acerca del uso:
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For correct use, the following parameters must be selected.
1.- The schedule: 1 (summer time) or 2 (winter time), which will decide the distribution of the three periods throughout the day according to the legislation in force in 2020.
2.- The demand profile: three real one-day demand profiles have been entered to check the effect of changing one profile for another on the invoice.
3.- The demand scale factor. The profiles have been defined as curves in unit values that will be multiplied by this maximum demand factor to create the demand curves.
4.- Power contracted in P1, peak period.
5.- Power contracted in P2, flat period.
6.- Contracted power in P3, valley period.
7.- Price in € / kW per day in P1, peak period.
8.- Price in € / kW per day in P2, flat period.
9.- Price in € / kW per day in P3, valley period.
Once all the parameters have been selected, when simulating, the laboratory calculates in each period the maximum average quarter-hour powers that the maximeters would record, compares them with the contracted powers and obtains the billable powers and estimates the cost in each period. It is important to consider aspects such as what contracted power is more convenient in each case for each period or how its modifications affect the bill. It is also important to understand that the maximeter records the average power value in every quarter of an hour for a whole month and saves the maximum value, although for didactic reasons, the laboratory does the calculations for a single day. Try to answer the following questions: given fixed contracted powers, how does the cost of power change on the invoice depending on the scale factor? Is it a linear dependency? Similarly, how does it affect modifying the contracted powers or prices, maintaining a fixed scale factor? Finally, can each period be optimized independently of the rest for a whole year?
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