Transient Stability of Power Systems
Transient Stability of Power Systems
Transient Stability of Power Systems
Stability
of
Power
Systems
A
Unied
Approach
to
Assessment
and
Control
By
Rishika
Chavala
IntroducAon
What
is
transient
stability?
Numerical
integra4on
methods
are
used
to
assess
it
accurately
such
as
4me-domain
methods-(calcula4ons
of
the
systems
dynamic
equa4ons
were
carried
out
manually
to
compute
the
machines
swing
curve).
Another
way
of
tackling
is
a
graphical
method
called
equal-area
criterion(EAC)-(It
is
used
to
assess
the
systems
stability
margins
and
limits,
for
evalua4ng
the
inuence
of
various
system
parameters).
The
EAC
energy
concept
is
a
par4cular
case
of
the
Lyapunovs
general
theory.
Lyapunovs
method
is
promising
as
it
covered
prac4cal
stringent
needs
that
T-D
approaches
cannot
meet
sa4sfactorily.
OperaAng
Modes
PrevenAve
security
assessment
is
concerned
with
a
ques4on
whether
a
system
in
its
normal
state
is
able
to
withstand
every
plausible
con4ngency.
Emergency
state
detecAon
aims
at
assessing
whether
the
system
is
in
the
process
of
losing
integrity
following
a
disturbance-(response
4me
cri4cal,
economic
considera4ons
secondary).
In
the
restoraAve
mode,
the
task
of
the
operator
is
to
minimize
the
amount
of
undelivered
energy
by
re-synchronizing
lost
genera4on
ASAP
and
picking
up
the
disconnected
load.
Models
1.
General
Modeling
Dynamic
4me
constants
in
power
systems
range
from
frac4on
of
microseconds
to
hours.
The
dynamic
behavior
is
governed
by
two
sets
of
non-
linear
equa4ons:
x.
=
f(x,
y,
p)
o
=
g(x,
y,
p)
The
dimension
of
vector
x
is
lower
bounded
by
twice
the
number
of
system
machines(typically>=50).
The
dimension
of
vector
y
is
lower
bounded
by
twice
the
number
of
nodes
of
the
power
system
model.
Vector
p
represents
parameters
whose
inuence
on
dynamic
security
may
be
studied.
Principle
ObjecAves:
Transient
stability
problem
in
the
realm
of
power
system
security,
its
opera4ng
modes,
applica4on
context
and
corresponding
needs
is
dened.
Transient
stability
phenomena
and
modeling
is
elaborated.
Strengths
and
weaknesses
of
the
conven4onal
4me-domain
approach
is
discussed.
conven4onal
direct
approaches
and
their
applica4ons
are
reviewed.
Principle of SIME
SIME
relies
on
two
Proposi4ons.
ProposiAon
1:
the
mechanism
of
loss
of
synchronism
in
a
power
system
originates
from
the
irrevocable
separa4on
of
its
machines
into
two
groups:
one
composed
of
the
cri4cal
machines
(CMs),
which
are
responsible
of
the
loss
of
synchronism,
the
other
of
the
noncri4cal
machines
(NMs).
ProposiAon
2:SIME
may
be
viewed
as
a
means
of
compressing
mul4-
machine
data
to
extract
informa4on
about
transient
stability
margins
and
cri0cal
machines.