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A Green Prison: The Santa Rita Jail Campus Microgrid (open access)

A Green Prison: The Santa Rita Jail Campus Microgrid

A large microgrid project is nearing completion at Alameda County’s twenty-two-year-old 45 ha 4,000-inmate Santa Rita Jail, about 70 km east of San Francisco. Often described as a green prison, it has a considerable installed base of distributed energy resources (DER) including an eight-year old 1.2 MW PV array, a five-year old 1 MW fuel cell with heat recovery, and considerable efficiency investments. A current US$14 M expansion adds a 2 MW-4 MWh Li-ion battery, a static disconnect switch, and various controls upgrades. During grid blackouts, or when conditions favor it, the Jail can now disconnect from the grid and operate as an island, using the on-site resources described together with its back-up diesel generators. In other words, the Santa Rita Jail is a true microgrid, or μgrid, because it fills both requirements, i.e. it is a locally controlled system, and it can operate both grid connected and islanded. The battery’s electronics includes Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology (CERTS) Microgrid technology. This enables the battery to maintain energy balance using droops without need for a fast control system.
Date: January 22, 2012
Creator: Marnay, Chris; DeForest, Nicholas & Lai, Judy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reconstruction Algorithm for Point Source Neutron Imaging through Finite Thickness Scintillator (open access)

Reconstruction Algorithm for Point Source Neutron Imaging through Finite Thickness Scintillator

None
Date: January 22, 2012
Creator: Wang, H; Tang, V; McCarrick, J F & Moran, S
System: The UNT Digital Library