Distributed energy systems (DESs) are crucial for renewable deployment, but decentralised generation substantially increases flexibility requirements. Flexibility is framed as a system property that emerges from the coordinated operation of demand, storage and dispatchable generation across multi-energy carriers. Demand response schemes and demand-side management can provide flexibility, but their effective potential is constrained by user participation. Sector-coupling strategies and energy storage systems enable temporal and cross-sector decoupling between renewable generation and demand. Electrochemical batteries are technically mature and well suited for short-term balancing, but costs and environmental impacts are significant. Power-to-Heat with heat pumps and thermal energy storage is a cost-effective solution, especially when combined with low-temperature district heating. Electric vehicles, when operated under smart-charging and vehicle-to-grid schemes, can shift large charging demands feeding energy into the grid, facing battery degradation and infrastructure costs. Power-to-Gas and Power-to-X use hydrogen and electrofuels as long-term storage but are penalised by low round-trip efficiencies and significant capital costs if power-to-power with fuel cells is applied. On the supply side, micro-CHP can provide dispatchable capacity when fuelled by renewable fuels and combined with seasonal storage. Costs and efficiencies are strongly scale-dependent, and markets, regulation, digital infrastructure and social acceptance are key enablers of flexibility.

Sector coupling and flexibility measures in distributed renewable energy systems. A comprehensive review / Pastore, L. M.. - In: SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2071-1050. - 18:1(2026), pp. 1-29. [10.3390/su18010437]

Sector coupling and flexibility measures in distributed renewable energy systems. A comprehensive review

Pastore L. M.
Conceptualization
2026

Abstract

Distributed energy systems (DESs) are crucial for renewable deployment, but decentralised generation substantially increases flexibility requirements. Flexibility is framed as a system property that emerges from the coordinated operation of demand, storage and dispatchable generation across multi-energy carriers. Demand response schemes and demand-side management can provide flexibility, but their effective potential is constrained by user participation. Sector-coupling strategies and energy storage systems enable temporal and cross-sector decoupling between renewable generation and demand. Electrochemical batteries are technically mature and well suited for short-term balancing, but costs and environmental impacts are significant. Power-to-Heat with heat pumps and thermal energy storage is a cost-effective solution, especially when combined with low-temperature district heating. Electric vehicles, when operated under smart-charging and vehicle-to-grid schemes, can shift large charging demands feeding energy into the grid, facing battery degradation and infrastructure costs. Power-to-Gas and Power-to-X use hydrogen and electrofuels as long-term storage but are penalised by low round-trip efficiencies and significant capital costs if power-to-power with fuel cells is applied. On the supply side, micro-CHP can provide dispatchable capacity when fuelled by renewable fuels and combined with seasonal storage. Costs and efficiencies are strongly scale-dependent, and markets, regulation, digital infrastructure and social acceptance are key enablers of flexibility.
2026
blockchain; building flexibility; energy self-consumption; energy techno-economic review; integrated energy systems; peer-to-peer energy trading; positive energy districts; power-to-gas; renewable energy communities; smart energy systems
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Sector coupling and flexibility measures in distributed renewable energy systems. A comprehensive review / Pastore, L. M.. - In: SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2071-1050. - 18:1(2026), pp. 1-29. [10.3390/su18010437]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Pastore_Sector Coupling and Flexibility_2026.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 1.69 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.69 MB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1762855
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 3
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 3
social impact