1,303 research outputs found

    Distributed Adaptive Droop Control for DC Distribution Systems

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    A Wide Area Hierarchical Voltage Control for Systems with High Wind Penetration and an HVDC Overlay

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    The modern power grid is undergoing a dramatic revolution. On the generation side, renewable resources are replacing fossil fuel in powering the system. On the transmission side, an AC-DC hybrid network has become increasingly popular to help reduce the transportation cost of electricity. Wind power, as one of the environmental friendly renewable resources, has taken a larger and larger share of the generation market. Due to the remote locations of wind plants, an HVDC overlay turns out to be attractive for transporting wind energy due to its superiority in long distance transmission of electricity. While reducing environmental concern, the increasing utilization of wind energy forces the power system to operate under a tighter operating margin. The limited reactive capability of wind turbines is insufficient to provide adequate voltage support under stressed system conditions. Moreover, the volatility of wind further aggravates the problem as it brings uncertainty to the available reactive resources and can cause undesirable voltage behavior in the system. The power electronics of the HVDC overlay may also destabilize the gird under abnormal voltage conditions. Such limitations of wind generation have undermined system security and made the power grid more vulnerable to disturbances. This dissertation proposes a Hierarchical Voltage Control (HVC) methodology to optimize the reactive reserve of a power system with high levels of wind penetration. The proposed control architecture consists of three layers. A tertiary Optimal Power Flow computes references for pilot bus voltages. Secondary voltage scheduling adjusts primary control variables to achieve the desired set points. The three levels of the proposed HVC scheme coordinate to optimize the voltage profile of the system and enhance system security. The proposed HVC is tested on an equivalent Western Electricity Coordinated Council (WECC) system modified by a multi-terminal HVDC overlay. The effectiveness of the proposed HVC is validated under a wide range of operating conditions. The capability to manage a future AC/DC hybrid network is studied to allow even higher levels of wind

    Cross-Layer Optimization for Power-Efficient and Robust Digital Circuits and Systems

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    With the increasing digital services demand, performance and power-efficiency become vital requirements for digital circuits and systems. However, the enabling CMOS technology scaling has been facing significant challenges of device uncertainties, such as process, voltage, and temperature variations. To ensure system reliability, worst-case corner assumptions are usually made in each design level. However, the over-pessimistic worst-case margin leads to unnecessary power waste and performance loss as high as 2.2x. Since optimizations are traditionally confined to each specific level, those safe margins can hardly be properly exploited. To tackle the challenge, it is therefore advised in this Ph.D. thesis to perform a cross-layer optimization for digital signal processing circuits and systems, to achieve a global balance of power consumption and output quality. To conclude, the traditional over-pessimistic worst-case approach leads to huge power waste. In contrast, the adaptive voltage scaling approach saves power (25% for the CORDIC application) by providing a just-needed supply voltage. The power saving is maximized (46% for CORDIC) when a more aggressive voltage over-scaling scheme is applied. These sparsely occurred circuit errors produced by aggressive voltage over-scaling are mitigated by higher level error resilient designs. For functions like FFT and CORDIC, smart error mitigation schemes were proposed to enhance reliability (soft-errors and timing-errors, respectively). Applications like Massive MIMO systems are robust against lower level errors, thanks to the intrinsically redundant antennas. This property makes it applicable to embrace digital hardware that trades quality for power savings.Comment: 190 page

    Ground fault current: Calculation of magnitude and its distribution in the neutral and ground paths

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    This thesis focuses on the ground fault current distribution and presents a method that enables a high accuracy in its calculation: starting from the model based on multi-conductor representation developed in Matlab, simulations are carried out to analyse which parameters influence the current distribution. These simulations, applied even on the portion of a real network, are also carried out on the commercial software Neplan and OpenDSS to validate the model

    Protecting the power grid: strategies against distributed controller compromise

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    The electric power grid is a complex, interconnected cyber-physical system comprised of collaborating elements for monitoring and control. Distributed controllers play a prominent role in deploying this cohesive execution and are ubiquitous in the grid. As global information is shared and acted upon, faster response to system changes is achieved. However, failure or malfunction of a few or even one distributed controller in the entire system can cause cascading, detrimental effects. In the worst case, widespread blackouts can result, as exemplified by several historic cases. Furthermore, if controllers are maliciously compromised by an adversary, they can be manipulated to drive the power system to an unsafe state. Due to the shift from proprietary control protocols to popular, accessible network protocols and other modernization factors, the power system is extremely vulnerable to cyber attacks. Cyber attacks against the grid have increased significantly in recent years and can cause severe, physical consequences. Attack vectors for distributed controllers range from execution of malicious commands that can cause sensitive equipment damage to forced system topology changes creating instability. These vulnerabilities and risks need to be fully understood, and greater technical capabilities are necessary to create resilient and dynamic defenses. Proactive strategies must be developed to protect the power grid from distributed controller compromise or failure. This research investigates the role distributed controllers play in the grid and how their loss or compromise impacts the system. Specifically, an analytic method based on controllability analysis is derived using clustering and factorization techniques on controller sensitivities. In this manner, insight into the control support groups and sets of critical, essential, and redundant controllers for distributed controllers in the power system is achieved. Subsequently, we introduce proactive strategies that utilize these roles and grouping results for responding to controller compromise using the remaining set. These actions can be taken immediately to reduce system stress and mitigate compromise consequences as the compromise itself is investigated and eliminated by appropriate security mechanisms. These strategies are demonstrated with several compromise scenarios, and an overall framework is presented. Additionally, the controller role and group insights are applied to aid in developing an analytic corrective control selection for fast and automated remedial action scheme (RAS) design. Techniques to aid the verification of control commands and the detection of abnormal control action behavior are also presented. In particular, an augmented DC power flow algorithm using real-time measurements is developed that obtains both faster speed and higher accuracy than existing linear methods. For detecting abnormal behavior, a generator control action classification framework is presented that leverages known power system behaviors to enhance the use of data mining tools. Finally, the importance of incorporating power system knowledge into machine learning applications is emphasized with a study that improves power system neural network construction using modal analysis. This dissertation details these methodologies and their roles in realizing a more cohesive and resilient power system in the increasingly cyber-physical world

    Simulation of Power System Response to Reactive Power Compensation

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    The demand of power in theUnited Stateshas doubled in the last decade. The constant increase in power flow has saturated the existing infrastructure. Modern advances in technology are changing the way utility industry increases the transmission of power throughout the country. Distributed Energy Resources are constantly improving their reliability and power capabilities. This thesis will simulate the response of the power system to reactive power injection. The testing will take place in the Reactive Power Laboratory at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The facility is an initiative by the U.S. Department of Energy to facilitate the development of new resource technologies. The simulation will include the use of a synchronous motor and an inverter as reactive power compensation devices. The model will be compared to actual measured data from which it will be used in planned contingency cases to study the response of the power system

    Voltage Stability Assessment and Enhancement in Power Systems

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    Voltage stability is a long standing issue in power systems and also is critical in the power system. This thesis aims to address the voltage stability problems. When wind generators reach maximum reactive power output, the bus voltage will operate near its steady-state stability limit. In order to avoid voltage instability, a dynamic L-index minimization approach is proposed by incorporating both wind generators and other reactive power resources. It then verifies the proposed voltage stability enhancement method using real data from load and wind generation in the IEEE 14 bus system. Additionally, power system is not necessary to always operate at the most voltage stable point as it requires high control efforts. Thus, we propose a novel L-index sensitivity based control algorithm using full Phasor measurement unit measurements for voltage stability enhancement. The proposed method uses both outputs of wind generators and additional reactive power compensators as control variables. The L-index sensitivity with respect to control variables is introduced. Based on these sensitivities, the control algorithm can minimise all the control efforts, while satisfying the predetermined L-index value. Additionally, a subsection control scheme is applied where both normal condition and weak condition are taken into account. It consists of the proposed L-index sensitivities based control algorithm and an overall L-index minimisation method. Threshold selection for the subsection control scheme is discussed and extreme learning machine is introduced for status fast classification to choose the method which has less power cost on the transmission line. Due to the high cost of PMUs, a voltage stability assessment method using partial Phasor measurement unit (PMU) measurements is proposed. Firstly, a new optimisation formulation is proposed that minimizes the number of PMUs considering the most sensitive buses. Then, extreme learning machine (ELM) is used for fast voltage estimation. In this way, the voltages at buses without PMUs can be rapidly obtained based on the PMUs measurements. Finally, voltage stability can be assessed by using L-index
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