Stockholm university

Research project Smart Converters for a Climate-neutral Society: AI-based Control and Coordination

In this project, we leverage advanced AI to develop smart power converters. They stabilize the electricity grid, enabling a secure, resilient and renewable-rich power supply for a climate-neutral society.

A person controlling wind power with AI tools.
Photo: Suriyo Munkaew/Mostphotos.

Power grids face stability challenges as they incorporate more renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind. Power electronic converters – devices linking renewables to the grid – have the potential to keep voltages stable. But current control methods struggle with the grid’s volatility and complexity.

This project uses advanced artificial intelligence (deep reinforcement learning) to enable data-driven, efficient control and coordination of smart converters. We train and test these AI algorithms on both simulation models and real laboratory microgrids, bridging the gap from theory to practice.

A collaborative team from Stockholm University, KTH, and Hitachi Energy brings together expertise in AI and power systems to ensure the solutions are both innovative and practical. The AI-enhanced converters will actively support the grid, allowing a higher share of renewables without sacrificing stability.

Ultimately, this will contribute to a more reliable and climate-neutral electricity supply with significantly reduced CO2 emissions.

This is Mohsen Amiri’s PhD project. Sindri Magnússon is the main supervisor.

Project members

Project managers

Mohsen Amiri

PhD Student

Department of Computer and Systems Sciences
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Sindri Magnússon

Senior Lecturer, Associate Professor

Department of Computer and Systems Sciences
Sindri

Members

Ali Beikmohammadi

Phd Student

Department of Computer and Systems Sciences
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