This website serves as a forum for research on flexible demand. As the proportion of total power supplied by renewable sources increases, it gets more costly to use reserve generation to compensate for the variability of renewables like solar and wind. Hence attention has been drawn to exploiting flexibility in demand as a substitute for reserve generation. Flexibility has different attributes, and it will be necessary to design incentive contracts and appropriate market or control mechanisms to realize the gains from flexibility.
This website will provide links to research papers and presentations, descriptions of data sets, and formulations of problems for further research. We hope the website will initially be used by colleagues and students. Contact us if you would like to have your project listed in our website.
Current Contributors (alphabetical order)
This website will provide links to research papers and presentations, descriptions of data sets, and formulations of problems for further research. We hope the website will initially be used by colleagues and students. Contact us if you would like to have your project listed in our website.
Current Contributors (alphabetical order)
Eilyan Bitar, Email: x@y x = eyb5 y = cornell.edu
Eilyan Bitar is an Assistant Professor in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Cornell University. His current research centers on the design of optimization, control, and market infrastructure for the modern power system.
Eilyan Bitar is an Assistant Professor in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Cornell University. His current research centers on the design of optimization, control, and market infrastructure for the modern power system.
Subhonmesh Bose, Email: x@y x = sb2333 y = cornell.edu
Subhonmesh Bose is a postdoctoral scholar at School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Cornell University. His research interests are in the application of convex optimization to power systems and modeling of strategic interaction in the electricity markets.
Subhonmesh Bose is a postdoctoral scholar at School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Cornell University. His research interests are in the application of convex optimization to power systems and modeling of strategic interaction in the electricity markets.
Kameshwar Poolla, Email: x@y x = poolla y = berkeley.edu
Kameshwar Poolla is the Cadence Distinguished Professor at UC Berkeley in EECS and ME. His current research interests include many aspects of future energy systems including economics, security, and commercialization. He also serves as the Founding Director of the IMPACT Center for Integrated Circuit manufacturing. Dr. Poolla co-founded OnWafer Technologies which was acquired by KLA-Tencor in 2007. Dr. Poolla has been awarded a 1988 NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, the 1993 Hugo Schuck Best Paper Prize, the 1994 Donald P. Eckman Award, the 1998 Distinguished Teaching Award of the University of California, the 2005 and 2007 IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing Best Paper Prizes, and the 2009 IEEE CSS Transition to Practice Award.
Kameshwar Poolla is the Cadence Distinguished Professor at UC Berkeley in EECS and ME. His current research interests include many aspects of future energy systems including economics, security, and commercialization. He also serves as the Founding Director of the IMPACT Center for Integrated Circuit manufacturing. Dr. Poolla co-founded OnWafer Technologies which was acquired by KLA-Tencor in 2007. Dr. Poolla has been awarded a 1988 NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, the 1993 Hugo Schuck Best Paper Prize, the 1994 Donald P. Eckman Award, the 1998 Distinguished Teaching Award of the University of California, the 2005 and 2007 IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing Best Paper Prizes, and the 2009 IEEE CSS Transition to Practice Award.
Pravin Varaiya, Email: x@y x = varaiya y = berkeley.edu
Pravin Varaiya is Professor of the Graduate School in the University of California, Berkeley. His current research is devoted to electrical energy and transportation systems.
Pravin Varaiya is Professor of the Graduate School in the University of California, Berkeley. His current research is devoted to electrical energy and transportation systems.