ECE4762011 Lect14
ECE4762011 Lect14
ECE4762011 Lect14
Lecture 14
Power Flow
2
Modeling Voltage Dependent Load
4
Voltage Dependent Load, cont'd
(0) 0
Again set v 0, guess x
1
Calculate
V 2 (10sin 2 ) 2.0 V2
2 2.0
(0)
f(x )
2 2
V2 (10cos 2 ) V2 (10) 1.0 V2 1.0
(0) 10 4
J (x )
0 12
1
(1) 0 10 4 2.0 0.1667
Solve x 1.0
1
0 12 0.9167
5
Voltage Dependent Load, cont'd
0.894 pu
One 1.000 pu Two -10.304 Deg
160.0 MW 160 MW
120.0 MVR 80 MVR
6
Dishonest Newton-Raphson
8
Dishonest N-R Example, cont’d
Maximum
of 15
iterations
11
Decoupled Power Flow
12
Decoupled Power Flow Formulation
15
Decoupled N-R Region of Convergence
16
Fast Decoupled Power Flow
One Two
200 MW
100 MVR
Line Z = j0.05 Line Z = j0.1
Three 1.000 pu
200 MW
100 MVR 34.3 14.3 20
Ybus j 14.3 24.3 10
20 10 30
19
FDPF Three Bus Example, cont’d
34.3 14.3 20
24.3 10
Ybus j 14.3 24.3 10 B
10 30
20 10 30
0.0477 0.0159
B 1
0.0159 0.0389
Iteratively solve, starting with an initial voltage guess
(0) (0)
2 0 V 2 1
V 1
3 0 3
(1)
2 0 0.0477 0.0159 2 0.1272
3 0
0.0159 0.0389 2
0.1091
20
FDPF Three Bus Example, cont’d
(1)
V 2 1 0.0477 0.0159 1 0.9364
V 1 0.0159 0.0389 1 0.9455
3
Pi (x ) n PDi PGi
Vk (Gik cos ik Bik sin ik )
Vi k 1 Vi
(2)
2 0.1272 0.0477 0.0159 0.151 0.1361
3 0.1091 0.0159 0.0389 0.107 0.1156
(2)
V 2 0.924
V
3 0.936
0.1384 0.9224
Actual solution: θ V
0.1171 0.9338
21
FDPF Region of Convergence
22
“DC” Power Flow
θ B 1 P
23
Power System Control
24
DC Power Flow Example
25
DC Power Flow Example
26
DC Power Flow 5 Bus Example
MVA MVA
360 MW A
520 MW
0 Mvar
MVA
0 Mvar
slack
1.000 pu 1.000 pu A A
1.000 pu 80 MW
0.000 Deg -4.125 Deg MVA MVA
-1.997 Deg 0 Mvar
1.000 pu
0.524 Deg
1.000 pu Two
-18.695 Deg
800 MW
0 Mvar
Notice with the dc power flow all of the voltage magnitudes are
1 per unit. 27
Indirect Transmission Line Control
28
Power Flow Simulation - Before
131.9 MW
124%
One Two
0 MW
64 MVR
29
Power Flow Simulation - After
Increasing the generation at bus 3 by 95 MW (and hence
decreasing it at bus 1 by a corresponding amount), results
in a 31.3 drop in the MW flow on the line from bus 1 to 2.
101.6 MW
100%
One Two
30
Analytic Calculation of Sensitivities
34
Area Control Error (ACE)
Ideally
ace the ACE
Pint should
Psched always
10 be
f zero.
Because the load is constantly changing, each utility must
constantly change its generation to “chase” the ACE.
35
Automatic Generation Control
36
Power Transactions
37
PTDFs
A B 250.0 MW D
10% 71%
71.1 MW C
60% 57%
92% 0.00 deg 64%
55%
11%
G F E
150.0 MW
24%
H I
200.0 MW
150.0 MW
39
Nine Bus PTDF Example, cont'd
A B 250.0 MW D
43% 30%
71.1 MW C
57% 10%
13% 0.00 deg 20%
35%
2%
G F E
150.0 MW
34%
H I
200.0 MW
150.0 MW
40
Nine Bus PTDF Example, cont'd
A B 250.0 MW D
6% 18%
71.1 MW C
6% 6%
12% 0.00 deg 12%
61%
19%
G F E
150.0 MW
21%
H I
200.0 MW
150.0 MW
41
WE to TVA PTDFs
42
Line Outage Distribution Factors (LODFS)
Pl LODFl ,k Pk
43
Flowgates
44
NERC Regional Reliability Councils
NERC
is the
North
American
Electric
Reliability
Council
45
NERC Reliability Coordinators
Source: http://www.nerc.com/page.php?cid=5%7C67%7C206
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