
Viewpoint
NREL's REDB Represents “Plug-n-Play” Smart Grid Integration Technology
February 1, 2012 By Jeanne Roberts
One of the miracles of the electronic age is the ability to plug almost any device into a computer and have it perform as described without any further effort on the part of the user.

NREL's REDB facility
The NREL is one of 12 labs operated by the DOE under its Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) section, and the only labin the group to offer complete development, testing, commercialization and deployment of renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies.
The Smart Grid is an electronic-age contribution to electricity supply, and allows regional Independent System Operators, or ISOs (think Western Electricity Coordination Council, or WECC), Regional Transmission Organizations (or RTOs, like the Southwest Power Pool, or SPP),and utility power plant operators to balance their electricity loads, cut emissions, and integrate renewable energy technologies without crashing the entire area-wide grid. (To avoid confusion, ISOs and RTOs essentially share the operational "hat", with the ISO focused on operations and the RTO on reliability).
At NREL, these electrically-connected labs represent part of the Energy Systems Integration Facility (ESIF), conceived and developed in 2010, where those doing research can go and literally plug in the technology they are developing – be it a flotation device in a wave power simulator or a solar panel coated with a new material – and see what effect their invention has on real and simulated power systems. Power capacity of the ESIF is one megawatt.
This is such an enormous boost to the advancement and integration of newer renewable energy breakthroughs that it’s hard to imagine it hasn’t become mainstream news. And the device that makes it possible is called the Research Electrical Distribution Bus, or REDB -- a bus is a computer subsystem device that transfers data between components in a computer, or between computers, thus the plug and play designation.
The architecture of this bus is made up of four rings – two AC and two DC. The bus runs in tandem with a SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) module which enables testers to turn the power on and off without destroying delicate electronics and to measure the various outputs. These, in turn, can be connected with a transformer in a solar array in the Outdoor Testing Facility, for example.
The heavy lifting in this system is performed by the REDB, while the SCADA acts as a controller and monitor, supporting a large screen in the control room on which researchers and NREL partners can watch the test in real-time. It is these kinds of R&D advancements that enable the NREL and partners to win DOE awards year after year, and attract such wide industry attention at its Industry Growth Forums.
In addition, as technologies advance or metamorphose, the reconfigurable ESIF labs are able to transform along with them and continue measuring and testing, since the ESIF buses integrate all three modalities; electrical energy, thermal energy and renewable fuels.
According to Acting Group Manager for Distributed Energy Systems Integration Bill Kramer, the facilities are designed to help electricity utilities and companies design more effective equipment (and peripherals) that will speed the uptake of renewable energy sources like wind and solar, and eliminate some of the risks and expenses of bringing the technology to the marketplace.
ESIF is also striving to make virtual connections with other research labs across the nation. This will not only help remote developers who don’t have their own integrated labs to complete development in a considerably shorter time frame, but will – where appropriate – make the sharing of renewable energy technology advances a case of a “rising tide that floats all boats.
This is a cross-post from EnergyBoom.com.
EnergyBoom is a global leader in energy news information, offering expert analysis on the world economy’s transition to cleaner, more efficient and more secure sources of energy.
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Morning News Roundup – February 29, 2012
Today's morning news roundup - all the energy and climate coverage you need to read.
Read more ...- Climate Progress
- GreenBiz
- Dot Earth
- NY Times Green Blog
- NRDC Action Fund- The Mark Up
- Grist- David Roberts
- The Energy Collective
- MAPAWATT
- Ecopolitology
- Earth & Industry
- Green Tech- Martin LaMonica
- Mother Jones- Kate Sheppard
- The Daily Climate
- EnergyBoom
- NRDC- Switchboard
- Miles Grant
- Treehugger
- Climate Compass
- The Oil Drum
- Greenbang
- Compete Coalition
- Climate 411
- EPA- Greenversations
- Taking the Initiative
- The Energy Fix
- The Heartland Institute
- The Energy Tribune
- Van Jones
- Aimee Christensen
- Amanda Little
- Mother Nature Network
- Energy Literacy
- The Heritage Foundation- Energy & Envrionment
- Green Chip Stocks
- Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
- Resources for the Future
- Josh Tickell
- Dan Weiss
- United Nations Foundation
- Global Green USA
- The Earth Institute
- The Rocky Mountain Institute Blog
- American Solutions- Energy
- Bipartisan Beat
- Green Business
- Growth Energy
- Earth Policy Institute
- EcoGeek
- Energy Strategist
- Coal Tattoo