Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
| topics:grid [2026/03/19 22:13] – admin | topics:grid [2026/04/18 01:25] (current) – vso_vso | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| - | <WRAP catbadge slate> | + | <WRAP catbadge slate> |
| ====== Grid ====== | ====== Grid ====== | ||
| <WRAP meta> | <WRAP meta> | ||
| - | lead-authors: | + | lead-authors: |
| - | contributors: | + | contributors: |
| - | reviewers: | + | reviewers: |
| - | version: | + | version: 0.5 |
| - | updated: | + | updated: |
| sensitivity: | sensitivity: | ||
| - | ai-disclosure: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) | + | ai-use: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) |
| status: draft | status: draft | ||
| - | short-desc: Architecture, | ||
| </ | </ | ||
| <WRAP intro> | <WRAP intro> | ||
| - | The grid refers to the interconnected network of transmission and distribution infrastructure through which electricity flows from generation sources to end-users, increasingly also in reverse. | + | The grid is the interconnected network of transmission and distribution infrastructure through which electricity flows. Smart grid transitions are reconfiguring it at both levels: at transmission level, new interconnectors and grid-forming inverters are changing how system inertia and frequency regulation work; at distribution/ |
| </ | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Why this matters ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Grids were designed around a simple logic: large generators at one end, passive consumers at the other, with transmission and distribution as the delivery pipe. Smart grid transitions break this logic at every point. Generation is now distributed across millions of small sites. Demand is increasingly flexible and, with storage and EVs, can feed back into the grid. The distribution network, which was never designed for two-way flows, becomes a coordination challenge. | ||
| <WRAP callout> | <WRAP callout> | ||
| - | The physical and logical architecture of electricity networks determines what distributed resources can do, and where system change is actually | + | Grid ownership, operation |
| </ | </ | ||
| - | Smart grid transitions are reconfiguring grid architecture at multiple levels. At the transmission level, new interconnectors and grid-forming inverters are changing how system inertia and frequency regulation work. At the distribution level, the proliferation of rooftop solar, batteries, and electric vehicles is turning networks designed for one-way power flow into active systems with bidirectional flows. The concept of the grid is expanding to include communication infrastructure, | + | ===== Shared definitions ===== |
| - | ===== A shared definition ===== | + | The grid encompasses the physical infrastructure of electricity transmission and distribution — lines, cables, transformers, |
| - | The grid encompasses the physical infrastructure of electricity | + | ^ Term ^ Definition ^ |
| + | | **Transmission system** | High-voltage, | ||
| + | | **Distribution system** | Medium and low-voltage network delivering | ||
| + | | **Grid-edge** | Devices and systems at the load and customer end of the distribution | ||
| + | | **Bidirectional flow** | Power flowing both from the grid to the customer and from the customer back to the grid, enabled by distributed generation | ||
| + | | **Grid code** | The set of technical and operational standards | ||
| - | A useful distinction separates the **transmission system** (high-voltage, | + | ===== Perspectives ===== |
| - | ===== Grid architecture: | + | <WRAP perspectives> |
| + | ==== Actors | ||
| - | Several reference frameworks have been developed | + | The grid involves a structured set of actors with distinct mandates: transmission system operators managing high-voltage bulk transfer and frequency stability; distribution system operators managing local delivery and increasingly active coordination of distributed resources; generators and storage operators deciding when to inject or withdraw power; and users at the grid edge whose collective behaviour is increasingly shaping local network conditions. Ownership and operation of grid assets are often separated under unbundling rules, and the clarity |
| - | ==== Smart Grid Interoperability Reference Model (SGIRM) ==== | + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: one case illustrating a specific actor coordination challenge as the distribution network becomes more active |
| - | The SGIRM, originally developed in IEEE Std 2030-2011 | + | ==== Technologies |
| - | The three IAPs cover: components and functions (physical | + | The physical |
| - | The three physical | + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: one case illustrating a specific |
| - | ==== GridWise Transactive Energy Framework (GWAC) | + | ==== Institutional structures |
| - | The GridWise Architecture Council' | + | Grid ownership |
| - | The GWAC Stack organises interoperability across three broad groupings: technical (basic connectivity, | + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: one case contrasting ownership |
| - | [Figure: GWAC Stack with strata of transactive energy. Source: GWAC (2019).] | + | </WRAP> |
| - | + | ||
| - | ==== Smart Grid Architecture Model (SGAM) ==== | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | The SGAM, developed by the CEN-CENELEC-ETSI Smart Grid Coordination Group and adopted as the reference architecture for EU smart grid standardisation, | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | The three axes are: **Domains** (the physical energy conversion chain: generation, transmission, | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | [Figure: SGAM three-dimensional representation across Domains, Zones, and Interoperability Layers. Source: CEN-CENELEC-ETSI Smart Grid Coordination Group.] | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ===== Network architecture and governance ===== | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Beyond technical architecture, | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Cross-tabulating network architecture against logical and governance configurations reveals how different combinations produce structurally distinct grid types, from centralised national monopolies to distributed locally co-owned grids. | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | **Network architecture × logical layer** | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ^ Logical layer ^^ Network architecture ^^^ | + | |
| - | | | | Centralised | Decentralised | Distributed | | + | |
| - | | Centralised | | Trusted National TSO | Smart Meter national ledger (e.g. Sweden) | Blockchain ledger for direct interaction | | + | |
| - | | Decentralised | | Markets and market institutions | Markets and market institutions; | + | |
| - | | Distributed | | Bilateral contract solutions | Bilateral contract solutions | Bilateral contract solutions | | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | **Network architecture × policy layer** | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ^ Policy layer ^^ Network architecture ^^^ | + | |
| - | | | | Centralised | Decentralised | Distributed | | + | |
| - | | Centralised | | Transmission Grid (national monopoly) | Super-Grid (global oligopoly) | Publicly owned local grids with local RES feed-in | | + | |
| - | | Decentralised | | Private monopolies and oligopolies of multinationals | Distribution Grid (local monopoly); suppliers on market | Linked Mini-Grids; local grid with local RES (e.g. cooperative) | | + | |
| - | | Distributed | | People as shareholder; | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ===== Key terms ===== | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ^ Term ^ Definition ^ | + | |
| - | | **Transmission system** | High-voltage, | + | |
| - | | **Distribution system** | Medium and low-voltage network delivering electricity to end-users; historically radial and passive, increasingly active with distributed generation and flexible loads. | | + | |
| - | | **Domain** | In SGAM, a segment of the physical energy conversion chain: generation, transmission, | + | |
| - | | **Zone** | In SGAM, a level of the operational hierarchy, from the physical process layer through field, station, operation, enterprise, and market. | | + | |
| - | | **Interoperability layer** | In SGAM, one of five levels at which components, systems, or organisations must exchange meaningful information: | + | |
| - | | **Transactive energy** | A control and coordination approach combining economic signals with physical control to balance supply, demand, and network constraints across distributed grid actors. | | + | |
| - | | **Grid-edge** | Devices and systems at the load/ | + | |
| ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ||
| - | **Grid | + | <WRAP distinction> |
| + | **Grid | ||
| + | In electricity sector usage, grid typically refers to physical infrastructure together with its control and communication overlay. Network covers | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | **Grid architecture and grid operation.** Architectural | + | <WRAP distinction> |
| + | **Grid | ||
| + | Grid refers to the physical network | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | **Centralised, | + | <WRAP distinction> |
| + | **Transmission vs distribution**\\ | ||
| + | These two sub-systems differ in voltage level, geographic scale, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| ===== Related topics ===== | ===== Related topics ===== | ||
| - | [[topics:infrastructure|Infrastructure]], [[topics:digitalization|Digitalisation]], [[topics:decentralization|Decentralisation]], [[topics:grid_edge|Grid Edge]], [[topics:grid_ownership|Grid Ownership]], [[topics:energy_logistics|Energy Logistics]], [[topics:operability|Operability]] | + | [[topics:grid_architecture|Grid architecture]] · [[topics:grid_edge|Grid edge]] · [[topics:grid_ownership|Grid ownership]] · [[topics:operator|Operator]] · [[topics:energy_logistics|Energy logistics]] · [[topics:operability|Operability]] · [[topics:resilience|Resilience]] |
| - | + | ||
| - | ===== References ===== | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | CEN-CENELEC-ETSI Smart Grid Coordination Group. //Smart Grid Architecture Model (SGAM) Framework// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Farhangi, H. (2010). The path of the smart grid. //IEEE Power and Energy Magazine//, 8(1), 18–28. https:// | + | |
| - | GWAC (2019). //GridWise Transactive Energy Framework, Version 1.1//. GridWise Architecture Council. https:// | + | ===== Topic notes ===== |
| - | IEEE (2023). // | + | Split from combined grid/ |
| - | Kubeczko, K. (2017). //Die Rolle von Smart Grids in der Transition zu nachhaltigen Energiesystemen// | ||
| - | NIST (2021). //Framework and Roadmap for Smart Grid Interoperability Standards, Release 4.0//. National Institute of Standards and Technology. https:// | + | ~~DISCUSSION|Discussion~~ |