COHORT: Coordination of Heterogeneous Thermostatically Controlled Loads for Demand Flexibility
Bingqing Chen, Jonathan Francis, Marco Pritoni, Soummya Kar, Mario, Berg\'es

TL;DR
COHORT is a scalable, distributed control framework that coordinates heterogeneous thermostatically controlled loads to optimize grid objectives, reduce peak demand, and preserve user comfort, validated through real-world experiments.
Contribution
This paper introduces COHORT, a novel distributed control method that coordinates diverse TCLs using ADMM, with convex relaxation for computational efficiency and real-world validation.
Findings
Reduced daily peak loads by 12.5% on average
Successfully maintained user comfort during demand response
Validated through hardware-in-the-loop simulation with real ACs
Abstract
Demand flexibility is increasingly important for power grids. Careful coordination of thermostatically controlled loads (TCLs) can modulate energy demand, decrease operating costs, and increase grid resiliency. We propose a novel distributed control framework for the Coordination Of HeterOgeneous Residential Thermostatically controlled loads (COHORT). COHORT is a practical, scalable, and versatile solution that coordinates a population of TCLs to jointly optimize a grid-level objective, while satisfying each TCL's end-use requirements and operational constraints. To achieve that, we decompose the grid-scale problem into subproblems and coordinate their solutions to find the global optimum using the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM). The TCLs' local problems are distributed to and computed in parallel at each TCL, making COHORT highly scalable and privacy-preserving.…
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