Analysis and Testing of Optimal Power Control Strategy for NASA Moon Base Interconnected DC Microgrid System

2023-01-1508

09/05/2023

Event
Energy & Mobility Technology, Systems, and Value Chain Conference and Expo
Authors Abstract
Content
As a part of NASA’s efforts in space, options are being examined for an Artemis moon base project to be deployed. This project requires a system of interconnected, but separate, DC microgrids for habitation, mining, and fuel processing. This in-place use of power resources is called in-situ resource utilization (ISRU). These microgrids are to be separated by 9-12 km and each contains a photovoltaic (PV) source, energy storage systems (ESS), and a variety of loads, separated by level of criticality in operation. The separate microgrids need to be able to transfer power between themselves in cases where there are generation shortfall, faults, or other failures in order to keep more critical loads running and ensure safety of personnel and the success of mission goals. In this work, a 2 grid microgrid system is analyzed involving a habitation unit and a mining unit separated by a tie line. A set of optimal controls that has been developed, including power flow controls on the tie line, dispatch of PV generation, and dispatch of non-critical loads, is analyzed, and validated in hardware on the Secure Scalable Microgrid Testbed (SSMTB). This testbed includes hardware emulators for a variety of energy sources, energy storage devices, pulsed loads, and other loads.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2023-01-1508
Pages
5
Citation
Rashkin, L., Donnelly, T., Cook, M., and Young, J., "Analysis and Testing of Optimal Power Control Strategy for NASA Moon Base Interconnected DC Microgrid System," SAE Technical Paper 2023-01-1508, 2023, https://doi.org/10.4271/2023-01-1508.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 5, 2023
Product Code
2023-01-1508
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English