DHYBRID implements fail-safe grid concept for Sri Lanka’s leading utility company

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The hybrid microgrid relies on DHYBRID’s Universal Power Platform energy management system as well as the company’s battery energy storage system, which offers 400 kWh of capacity and an output of 400 kW. Power is generated by four roof-mounted solar systems with a combined output of 350 kWp. A diesel generator is reserved for exceptional circumstances.

Automatic compensation for fluctuations

DHYBRID’s hardware and software solution controls all local power generators, manages key electrical loads and avoids disruptions to the grid. Together with the storage system, it automatically compensates for fluctuations in renewable power generation, thereby increasing the autonomy of the local microgrid. Since a significant proportion of locally generated renewable energy is consumed on-site, only minimal amounts of electricity must be drawn from the national power grid. This approach also relieves strain on the public grid by using load management to ensure a more constant feed-in of surplus renewable energy.

Network of grid-connected microgrids provides security

In order to implement the microgrid concept across a broader area, additional grid-connected microgrids are planned. Connecting these microgrids to both the public grid and one another will create a supply system that maximizes local energy use while also preventing area-wide power failures.

The innovative concept of connected microgrids offers several advantages over a power system that lacks access to independent sub-grids: “For one thing, it is easier to coordinate consumers and producers of renewable energy in small-scale, local grids than in a centralized system,” explains Fabian Baretzky, regional manager at DHYBRID. “For another, if there is a power outage, the individual microgrids disconnect from the public grid to provide uninterrupted on-site power. This offers operators a high degree of stability and saves them money.

If the public grid fails, the DHYBRID Universal Power Platform (UPP) automatically opens the mains breaker, which creates a local stand-alone grid managed by the UPP without interrupting the power supply. When the system detects that the public grid is available again, it measures the necessary parameters and resynchronizes the battery inverter, before seamlessly reconnecting the microgrid to the public grid.