A Mycorrhizal Model for Transactive Energy Markets

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Date

2022-09-08

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Publisher

Virginia Tech

Abstract

Mycorrhizal Networks (MNs) facilitate the exchange of resources including energy, water, nutrients, and information between trees and plants in forest ecosystems. This work explored MNs as an inspiration for new market models in transactive energy networks, which similarly involve exchanges of energy and information between buildings in local communities. Specific insights from the literature on the structure and function of MNs were translated into an energy model with the aim of addressing challenges associated with the proliferation of distributed energy resources (DERs) at the grid edge and the incorporation of DER aggregations into wholesale energy markets. First, a systematic review of bio-inspired computing interventions applied to microgrids and their interactions with modern energy markets established a technical knowledge base within the context of distributed electrical systems. Second, a bio-inspired design process built on this knowledge base to yield a structural and functional blueprint for a computational mycorrhizal energy market simulation. Lastly, that computational model was implemented and simulated on a blockchain-compatible, multi-agent software platform to determine the effect that mycorrhizal strategies have on transactive energy market performance. The structural translation of a mapped ectomycorrhizal network of Douglas-firs in Oregon, USA called the 'wood-wide web' created an effective framework for the organization of a novel mycorrhizal energy market model that enabled participating buildings to redistribute percentages of their energy assets on different competing exchanges throughout a series of week-long simulations. No significant changes in functional performance –- as determined by economic, technical, and ecological metrics – were observed when the mycorrhizal results were compared to those of a baseline transactive energy community without periodic energy asset redistribution. Still, the model itself is determined to be a useful tool for further exploration of innovative, automated strategies for DER integration into modern energy market structures and electrical infrastructure in the age of Web3, especially as new science emerges to better explain trigger and feedback mechanisms for carbon exchange through MNs and how mycorrhizae adapt to changes in the environment. This dissertation concludes with a brief discussion of policy implications and an analysis applying the ecological principles of robustness, biodiversity, and altruism to the collective energy future of the human species.

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Keywords

Mycorrhizal Networks, Transactive Energy, Wholesale Energy Markets, Distributed Energy Resources, Distributed Ledgers, Blockchain, Bio-inspired Computing, Bio-inspired Design, Ecological Modeling, Multi-agent Systems, Reinforcement Learning

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