Integrating Electricity Market Granularity and Sector Coupling: Adaptive Power-to-X Scheduling Optimization under Dynamic Electricity Markets

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Sub-hourly operational optimization of Power-to-X (PtX) hydrogen systems remains largely unexplored, despite their growing importance as flexible assets in renewable-dominated energy systems. Existing models typically assume hourly market resolution and linear process behavior, overlooking how intra-hour price volatility and non-linear electrolyzer efficiencies shape operational costs, flexibility, and emissions. This study pioneers a data-driven optimization framework that integrates synthetic 15-minute electricity-price generation, agent-based simulation, and mixed-integer quadratically constrained programming (MIQCP) to evaluate hydrogen-production strategies under the forthcoming European 15-minute market regime. Using a Danish PtX facility with on-site wind and solar generation as a case study, the framework quantifies how adaptive scheduling compares with non-adaptive baselines across multiple volatility scenarios. Results show that dynamic 15-minute optimization reduces hydrogen-production costs by up to 40 % relative to hourly scheduling and that extending the objective function to include electricity-sales revenue improves net profitability by approximately 11%. Although adaptive scheduling slightly increases CO2 intensity due to altered renewable utilization, it substantially enhances flexibility and cost efficiency. Scientifically, the study introduces the first reproducible synthetic-data approach for sub-hourly optimization of non-linear electrolyzer systems, bridging a critical gap in demand-side-management and sector-coupling literature. Practically, it provides evidence-based guidance for PtX operators and regulators on designing adaptive, volatility-responsive control strategies aligned with Europe’s transition to high-frequency electricity markets and net-zero objectives.

Article activity feed