1,196 research outputs found

    Power quality and electromagnetic compatibility: special report, session 2

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    The scope of Session 2 (S2) has been defined as follows by the Session Advisory Group and the Technical Committee: Power Quality (PQ), with the more general concept of electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and with some related safety problems in electricity distribution systems. Special focus is put on voltage continuity (supply reliability, problem of outages) and voltage quality (voltage level, flicker, unbalance, harmonics). This session will also look at electromagnetic compatibility (mains frequency to 150 kHz), electromagnetic interferences and electric and magnetic fields issues. Also addressed in this session are electrical safety and immunity concerns (lightning issues, step, touch and transferred voltages). The aim of this special report is to present a synthesis of the present concerns in PQ&EMC, based on all selected papers of session 2 and related papers from other sessions, (152 papers in total). The report is divided in the following 4 blocks: Block 1: Electric and Magnetic Fields, EMC, Earthing systems Block 2: Harmonics Block 3: Voltage Variation Block 4: Power Quality Monitoring Two Round Tables will be organised: - Power quality and EMC in the Future Grid (CIGRE/CIRED WG C4.24, RT 13) - Reliability Benchmarking - why we should do it? What should be done in future? (RT 15

    Data-driven load profiles and the dynamics of residential electricity consumption

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    The dynamics of power consumption constitutes an essential building block for planning and operating sustainable energy systems. Whereas variations in the dynamics of renewable energy generation are reasonably well studied, a deeper understanding of the variations in consumption dynamics is still missing. Here, we analyse highly resolved residential electricity consumption data of Austrian, German and UK households and propose a generally applicable data-driven load model. Specifically, we disentangle the average demand profiles from the demand fluctuations based purely on time series data. We introduce a stochastic model to quantitatively capture the highly intermittent demand fluctuations. Thereby, we offer a better understanding of demand dynamics, in particular its fluctuations, and provide general tools for disentangling mean demand and fluctuations for any given system, going beyond the standard load profile (SLP). Our insights on the demand dynamics may support planning and operating future-compliant (micro) grids in maintaining supply-demand balance

    Standards-based wireless sensor networks for power system condition monitoring

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    This paper assesses the industrial needs motivating interest in wireless monito ring within the power industry, and reviews applications of WSN technology for substation condition monitoring (Section 2). A key contribution is the identification of a set of technical requirements for substation - based WSNs, focused around security requi rements, robustness to RF noise, and other utility - specific concerns (Section 3). Section 4 comprehensively assesses the suitability of various IWSN protocols for substation environments, using these requirements. A case study implementation of one standar d, ISA100.11a, is reported in Section 5, along with deployment experience. The paper concludes by describing future research challenges for WSN protocols which are specific to this domain

    Stochastic timeseries analysis in electric power systems and paleo-climate data

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    In this thesis a data science study of elementary stochastic processes is laid, aided with the development of two numerical software programmes, applied to power-grid frequency studies and Dansgaard--Oeschger events in paleo-climate data. Power-grid frequency is a key measure in power grid studies. It comprises the balance of power in a power grid at any instance. In this thesis an elementary Markovian Langevin-like stochastic process is employed, extending from existent literature, to show the basic elements of power-grid frequency dynamics can be modelled in such manner. Through a data science study of power-grid frequency data, it is shown that fluctuations scale in an inverse square-root relation with their size, alike any other stochastic process, confirming previous theoretical results. A simple Ornstein--Uhlenbeck is offered as a surrogate model for power-grid frequency dynamics, with a versatile input of driving deterministic functions, showing not surprisingly that driven stochastic processes with Gaussian noise do not necessarily show a Gaussian distribution. A study of the correlations between recordings of power-grid frequency in the same power-grid system reveals they are correlated, but a theoretical understanding is yet to be developed. A super-diffusive relaxation of amplitude synchronisation is shown to exist in space in coupled power-grid systems, whereas a linear relation is evidenced for the emergence of phase synchronisation. Two Python software packages are designed, offering the possibility to extract conditional moments for Markovian stochastic processes of any dimension, with a particular application for Markovian jump-diffusion processes for one-dimensional timeseries. Lastly, a study of Dansgaard--Oeschger events in recordings of paleoclimate data under the purview of bivariate Markovian jump-diffusion processes is proposed, augmented by a semi-theoretical study of bivariate stochastic processes, offering an explanation for the discontinuous transitions in these events and showing the existence of deterministic couplings between the recordings of the dust concentration and a proxy for the atmospheric temperature
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