Power System Stability
Power System Stability
Power System Stability
presented by:
Copyright © P. Kundur
This material should not be used without the author's consent 1529pk - 1
Power System Stability and Control
Tutorial Outline
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Power System Stability
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Power System Stability: Basic Concepts
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Basic Concepts (cont'd)
Following a transient disturbance, if the power system is stable it will reach a new
equilibrium state with practically the entire system intact:
faulted element and any connected load are disconnected
actions of automatic controls and possibly operator action will eventually restore
system to normal state
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Classification of Power System Stability
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Power
PowerSystem
SystemStability
Stability Consideration
for
Classification
Physical
Rotor Angle Frequency Voltage Nature/ Main
Rotor Angle Frequency Voltage
Stability Stability Stability System
Stability Stability Stability
Parameter
Small-Signal Transient
Transient Large-Disturbance
Large-Disturbance Small-Disturbance
Small-Disturbance Size of
Small-Signal
Stability Stability
Stability Voltage
VoltageStability
Stability Voltage
VoltageStability
Stability Disturbance
Stability
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Rotor Angle Stability
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Transient Stability
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Small-Signal (Angle) Stability
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Voltage Stability
Ability of power system to maintain steady voltages at all buses in the system
after being subjected to a disturbance
The driving force for voltage instability is usually the load characteristics
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Short-Term and Long-Term Voltage Stability
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Frequency Stability
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Frequency Stability (cont'd)
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Examples of Major System Blackouts Caused by
Different Forms of Instability
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November 9, 1965 Blackout of
Northeast U.S. and Ontario
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November 9, 1965 Blackout of NE U.S. and Ontario
Clear day with mild weather; load levels in the region normal
Within a few minutes, there was a complete shut down of electric service to:
virtually all of the states of New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
Massachusetts, Vermont
parts of New Hampshire, New Jersey and Pennsylvania
most of Ontario
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North American Eastern Interconnected System
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Events that Caused the 1965 Blackout
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Events that Caused the 1965 Blackout (cont'd)
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Events that Caused the 1965 Blackout (cont’d)
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Formation of Reliability Councils
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Special Protections Implemented after the 1965 Blackout
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April 19, 1972 Blackout of
Eastern Ontario
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April 19, 1972 Disturbance: Eastern Ontario
Incident:
230 kV lines east of Toronto tripped due to communication malfunction; ties to New York at St.
Lawrence tripped
generation rich island formed in eastern Ontario (G=3900 MW, L=3000 MW)
frequency rose to 62.5 Hz and then dropped to 59.0 Hz due to speed governor
underfrequency load shedding !
frequency rose to 62.6 Hz and dropped to 58.7 Hz
stabilized at 60.8 Hz with 1875 MW generation
Frequency Instability !
Source of problem: overspeed controls associated with prime-mover governors of Pickering “A:”
NGS
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MHC Turbine Governing System with Auxiliary
Governor
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Transient Response of Nuclear Units with Auxiliary
Governor
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Transient Response of Nuclear Units with Auxiliary
Governor Out-of-Service
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July 2, 1996 WSCC / WECC
(Western North American
Interconnected System)
Disturbance
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
Tripping of two (of four) Jim Bridger units as stability control; this should
have stabilized the system
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance (cont’d)
About 24 seconds later, a long 230 kV line (Amps line) from western Montana to Southern
Idaho tripped, due to zone 3 relay operation
parallel 161 kV line subsequently tripped
Three seconds later, four 230 kV lines from Hells Canyon generation to Boise tripped
Voltage Instability!!!
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
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WSCC July 2, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
Time in Seconds
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TSAT was Used to Replicate Disturbance
in Time Domain
MEASURED RESPONSE
SIMULATED RESPONSE
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August 10, 1996 WSCC
(WECC) Disturbance
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WSCC August 10, 1996 Disturbance
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August 10th, 1996 WSCC Event
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WSCC August 10, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
3000
2700
2600
2500
2400
2300 0 3 6 9 12 16 19 22 25 28 31 34 37 40 43 47 50 53 56 59 62 65 68 71 74
Time in Seconds
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WSCC August 10, 1996 Disturbance (cont'd)
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TSAT was Used to Replicate Disturbance in
Time Domain
MEASURED RESPONSE
SIMULATED RESPONSE
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Sites Selected for PSS Modifications
San Onofre
(Addition) Palo Verde
(Tune existing)
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Power System Stabilizers
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Design of HVDC Modulation
HVDC intertie shown (as expected) to have low participation in the mode of
interest (0.23 Hz interarea oscillations)
Often however, HVDC can be modulated to improve damping, provided
adequate input signal is found and proper compensator is designed
SSAT used to examine frequency response for several potential input
signals
Frequency response magnitude identified local bus frequency as having
good operability/controllability of the mode of interest
Frequency response phase used to design compensator which provides
proper modulation signal to HVDC controls
TSAT and SSAT used to verify modulation performance
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TSAT Verification of Effectiveness of HVDC
Modulation
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March 11, 1999 Brazil
Blackout
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March 11, 1999 Brazil Blackout
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March 11, 1999 Brazil Blackout (cont'd)
Remedial Actions:
power system divided into 5 security zones: regions with major generation and
transmission system;
emergency controls added for enhancing stability
improved layout and protection of major EHV substations
improved maintenance of substation equipment and protection/control
equipment
improved restoration plans
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Challenges to Secure Operation of
Today's Power Systems
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Limitations of Traditional Approach to Power
System Stability
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Challenges to Secure Operation of Today's
Power Systems
Power Systems are large complex systems covering vast geographic areas
national/continental grids
cont'd
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Challenges to Secure Operation of Today's Power
Systems (cont'd)
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Example of a Complex Mode of Instability
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North American Western Interconnected System
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Case A
Note: power flow conditions considered for this study as unusual, and
do not represent present operating conditions
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BPA Bus Voltage
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BC Hydro Bus Voltage Near Alberta Tie
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Rotor Angles in B.C. and Alberta
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Case B
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BC Hydro and Alberta Bus Voltages
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Rotor Angles in B.C. and Alberta
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North American Western Interconnected System
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Major Power System Blackouts in 2003
and 2004
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Blackouts in 2003 and 2004
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August 14, 2003 Blackout of Northeast US
and Canada
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14 August 2003 Blackout of Northeast US - Canada
For details refer to: "Final Report of Aug 14, 2003 Blackout in the US
and Canada: Causes and Recommendations", US-Canada Power
System Outage Task Force, April 5, 2004.
www.NERC.com
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NERC Regions Affected: MAAC, ECAR, NPCC
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Conditions Prior to Blackout
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Blackout Started in Midwest
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Sequence of Events
The Midwest ISO (MISO) state estimator and real-time contingency analysis
(RTCA) software not functioning properly from 12:15 to 16:04
prevented MISO from performing proper "early warning" assessments as the
events were unfolding
At the First Energy (FE) Control Center, a number of computer software
problems occurred on the Energy Management System (EMS) starting at
14:14
contributed to inadequate situation awareness at FE until 15:45
The first significant event was the outage of East Lake generating unit #5 in
the FE system at 13:31:34
producing high reactive power output
voltage regulator tripped to manual on overexcitation
unit tripped when operator tried to restore AVR
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East Lake 5 Trip: 1:31:34 pm
ONTARIO
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Sequence of Events cont'd
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Sequence of Events
Tripping of many additional 345 kV lines in Ohio and Michigan by Zone 3 (or
Zone 2 set similar to Zone 3) relays
Tripping of several generators in Ohio and Michigan
At 16:10:38, due to cascading loss of major lines in Ohio and Michigan, power
transfer from Canada (Ontario) to the US on the Michigan border shifted
power started flowing counter clockwise from Pennsylvania through New York
and Ontario into Michigan
3700 MW of reverse power flow to serve loads in Michigan and Ohio, which were
severed from rest of interconnected system except Ontario
Voltage collapsed due to extremely heavy loadings on transmission lines
Cascading outages of several hundred lines and generators leading to
blackout of the region
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End of Cascade
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Primary Causes of Blackout
(as identified by the US-Canada Outage Task Force)
First Energy (FE) failed to conduct rigorous long-term planning studies and
sufficient voltage stability analyses of Ohio control area
FE used operational criteria that did not reflect actual system behaviour
and needs
ECAR (East Central Area Reliability Council) did not conduct an
independent review or analysis of FE's voltage criteria and operating
needs
Some NERC planning standards were sufficiently ambiguous that FE
could interpret them in a way that resulted in inadequate reliability for
system operation
cont'd
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Causes of Blackout cont'd
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Causes of Blackout cont'd
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September 23, 2003 Blackout of Southern
Sweden and Eastern Denmark
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The Transmission Grid in the Nordic Countries
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Blackout of 23 September 2003 in Southern Sweden
and Eastern Denmark
Pre-disturbance conditions:
system moderately loaded
facilities out of services for maintenance:
400 kV lines in South Sweden
4 nuclear units in South Sweden
3 HVDC links to Germany and Poland
The first contingency was loss of a 1200 MW nuclear unit in South
Sweden at 12:30 due to problems with steam valves
increase of power transfer from the north
system security still acceptable
cont'd
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Blackout of 23 September 2003 in Southern Sweden
and Eastern Denmark (cont'd)
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The Blackout in Southern Sweden and Eastern
Denmark, September 23, 2003
Hallsbe rg
Voltage Collapse
Glan
Kimstad
Kolstad
B reare d Alvesta
Nybro Isolated Subsystem
Hemsjö
Söderåse n
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The Blackout in Southern Sweden and Eastern
Denmark, September 23, 2003
The blacked-out area after the grid separation at 12.37
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Blackout of 23 September 2003 in Southern Sweden
and Eastern Denmark cont'd
The isolated system had enough generation to cover only about 30% of its
demand
voltage and frequency collapsed within a few seconds, blacking out the area
Impact of the blackout:
loss of 4700 MW load in south Sweden
1.6 million people affected
City of Malmo and regional airports and rail transportation without power
loss of 1850 MW in eastern Denmark
2.4 million people affected
City of Copenhagen, airport and rail transportation without power
Result of an (n-3) contingency, well beyond "design contingencies"
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September 28, 2003 Blackout of Italy
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Italian System Blackout of 28 September 2003
Predisturbance conditions (Sunday, 3:00 am):
total load in Italy was 27,700 MW, with 3638 MW pump load
total import from rest of Europe was 6651 MW
Sequence of events:
a tree flashover caused tripping of a major tie-line between Italy and Switzerland (Mettlen-
Lavorgo 380 kV line) at 03:01:22
Sychro-check relay prevented automatic and manual reclosure of line due to the large
angle (42°) across the breaker
resulted in an overload on a parallel path
attempts to reduce the overload by Swiss transmission operators by network change was
not successful
at 03:21 import by Italy was reduced by 300 MW but was not sufficient to mitigate the
overload of a second 380 kV line (Sils-Soazza), which tripped at 03:25:22 due to sag and
tree contact
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Italian System Blackout of 28 September 2003 cont'd
the cascading trend continued and the power deficit in Italy was such that the
ties to France, Austria and Slovania were tripped
the outages left the Italian system with a power shortage of 6400 MW
the frequency decay could not be controlled adequately by under-frequency
load shedding
over the course of several minutes, the entire Italian System collapsed at
3:28:00
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What Can We Do To Prevent
Blackouts?
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Factors Impacting on System Security
Physical System
Integrated Generation,
Transmission, Distribution
System
Business Structure
Owning and operating entities; Financial
and contractual arrangements
Regulatory Framework
Governments, Reliability Councils
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Comprehensive Approach to Enhancing System
Stability
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Reliability Criteria
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Improved Protective Relaying
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Robust Stability Controls
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Emergency Controls for Extreme Contingencies
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"Defense Plan" Against Extreme Contingencies:
Coordinated Emergency Controls
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Examples of Response-Based Emergency Control
Schemes
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Example 1: Prevention of Voltage Collapse in
Eastern Ontario
Under high load conditions, loss of a major 230 kV line leads to voltage
collapse of Ottawa area
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Example 1: (cont'd)
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Example 1: (cont'd)
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1300 MW
1374 MW
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Response-Based Emergency Controls
Example 2: Transient Excitation Boosting
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Block Diagram of TSEC Scheme
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Effect of TSEC on Transient Stability
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Example 2: (cont'd)
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Comprehensive Stability Analysis Tools
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State-of-the-Art On-Line Dynamic Security
Assessment (DSA)
Practical tools have been developed with the required accuracy, speed and
robustness
a variety of analytical techniques integrated
distributed hardware architecture using low cost PCs
integrated with energy management system
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Dynamic Security Assessment Tools Developed and
Used by Powertech for System Design and Operation
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On-Line Voltage Stability Assessment Tool
(VSAT)
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Key Elements of VSAT
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Contingency Selection Module
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Fig. 4 Automatic Critical Contingency Selection
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Security Computation Module
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Modelling:
generator capability curves
governor response, economic dispatch, AGC
nonlinear loads
control of ULTCs, switched shunts, etc.
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Secure Operating Region
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Secure Operating Region
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Remedial Measures Module
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Ranking and Applying Remedial Measures
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Expanding the Secure Region: Remedial Measures
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Fast Time-Domain Simulation Module
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Mathematical Formulation
The complete set of differential/algebraic equations of a power system has
the following general form:
f X, V , Z
X
YV I X , V , Z
Where:
X = state vector
V = bus voltage vector
I = current injector vector
Y = network admittance matrix
Z = variables associated with the slow
control devices including ULTCs, loads, switchable reactors
and capacitors, and field current limiters
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Mathematical Formulation
0 f X, V, Zi
YV I X, V, Zi
As time progresses, the slow control devices operate and the values of Z
change. The above set of nonlinear algebraic equations is solved every
time the values of Z change.
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VSAT Structure
Powerflow
Solver
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Transient Stability Assessment Tool (TSAT)
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Transient Stability Assessment (TSA)
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A Practical Tool for TSA
Overall architecture similar to that of VSA
Time-domain program, with detailed models and efficient solution
techniques, forms simulation engine
EEAC used for screening contingencies, computing stability margin,
stability limit search, and early termination of simulation
“Prony analysis” for calculation of damping of critical modes of oscillation
A powerflow dispatcher and solver for finding the stability limit
a fully automated process
No modeling compromises;
can handle multi-swing instability
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EEAC
Integrates the dynamic response in the multimachine space, and maps the
resultant trajectory into a set of one-machine-infinite-bus planes
By applying complementary cluster center of inertia (CCCI) transformations
Keeps all dynamic information in the multimachine space
Stability analysis can be quantitatively performed for the image OMIB
systems
Has the same accuracy and modeling flexibility
Fast, quantitative
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EEAC
Loss of transient stability in a power system always starts in a binary splitting of generators:
Critical cluster of generators
Rest of the system
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EEAC
The classical equal area criterion can be extended to the visual OMIB system
Stability margin of the system is defined as
Ad Aa
100 x if the system is stable Ad Aa
Ad
A Aa
100 x d if the system is unstable Aa Ad
Aa
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Use of EEAC Theory
Contingency screening
stability margin gives an indication of the relative severity
Corrective measures for maintaining secure system operation
critical cluster of generators (CCG) provides valuable information
Power transfer limit search
stability limit can be determined in four iterations using stability margin
each iteration involves a detailed simulation and computation of stability index
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Results - Test System
System description
BC Hydro system
1430 buses
186 generators
4 HVDC links
Interface
Contingency
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Speed Enhancement: Parallel Processing
Code parallelization
differential equations easily parallelized, but not network equations
speed-ups limited by serial slowdown effect
up to 7 times speed-up can be achieved with 20-30 processors
not an effective way
Conventional serial computers offer much faster computational per-CPU
For multiple contingencies
perform initialization only once
run contingencies on multiple processors - one processor per contingency
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TSAT Structure
Solved Powerflow
+
Dynamic Data
Time-Domain
Simulation
Increase
Transfer
Stability
Indices
No
Security Limit?
Yes
Sufficient No Remedial
Margin? Measures
Yes
STOP
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Computational Performance of DSA
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Computational Speed of DSA (cont'd)
Power System model with 4655 buses, 156 generators, using 1.7 GHz,
Pentium 4 PC with 256 MB memory
Voltage Stability Assessment:
- screening 300 contingencies 20.0 secs
- detailed security analysis 1.2 secs
with 20 critical contingencies
- one transfer limit search 12.0 secs
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Future Trends in DSA: Intelligent Systems
Knowledge base created using simulation of a large number cases and system
measurements
Automatic learning, data mining, and decision trees to build intelligent systems
Fast analysis using a broad knowledge base and automatic decision making
Provides new insight into factors and system parameters affecting stability
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DSA Using Intelligent Systems
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Real-Time Monitoring and Control:
An Emerging Technology
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Distributed Generation (DG)
Microturbines
small, high speed power plants
operate on natural gas or gas from landfills
Fuel Cells
combines hydrogen with oxygen from air to generate electricity
hydrogen may be supplied from an external source or generated inside fuel cell by
reforming a hydrocarbon fuel
Not vulnerable to power grid failure due to system instability or natural calamities
protection and controls should be designed so that units continue to operate when
isolated from the grid
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Reliability Management System
Need for a single entity with overall responsibility for security of entire
interconnected system
real-time decisions
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Summary
1. The new electricity supply industry presents increasing challenges for stable and
secure operation of power systems
2. State-of-the-art methods have advanced our capabilities significantly
comprehensive stability analysis tools
automated tools for system planning/design
on-line Dynamic Security Assessment (DSA)
coordinated design of robust stability controls
3. Industry is yet to take full advantage of these developments
cont'd
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Summary (cont'd)
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