Title: PowerPoint Presentation clearwater
1Stability and Security of Power Networks G. T.
Heydt Arizona State University ECEDHA 2004
Annual Meeting
March, 2004 Orlando, Florida
2Outline
- Stability and security a general discussion
- Weaknesses and strengths of the North American
grid - Some theoretical considerations
- Solutions short range and long range
- Propaganda power engineering education
- Conclusions
3Stability
- Power system stability basically refers to the
ability of operating an AC network with all
generators in synchronism, retaining synchronism
even after a large disturbance
4Stability
- Each synchronous generator has a Newtons law
second order nonlinear differential equation that
describes the machine angle and control systems
(e.g., power system stabilizers) also contribute
a higher order nonlinear controller to the
dynamics - A large interconnection (WECC, e.g.) may have
about 200 generators 150 PSSs about 1000 to
10000 order nonlinear differential equations
5Stability
- The basic analysis technique is state space
analysis / eigenvalues for the linearized system,
or simulation for the nonlinear system.
Typically, the dimension is very high in the
1000 10,000 range. The interconnection is
modeled as Ibus Ybus Vbus which is reduced to
eliminate the non-dynamic nodes (i.e., remove the
non-generation nodes).
6Power system stabilizers
- A PSS is a controller that uses (usually local)
measurements to provide a signal to one generator
so that damping torque is produced by the machine
field winding. The basic concept is that a
linear controller is used with standard feedback
control technology to place the poles of the
linearized system solidly in the LHP. Virtually
all large generating units in North America are
fitted with PSSs.
7Power system stabilizers
- The main weaknesses of this approach are that
the nonlinear system may respond poorly, and also
dynamics external to the generator PSS are not
modeled (nor included in the measurements).
Therefore modes that result from inter area
dynamics may not be damped.
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
8By injecting the appropriate signals from distant
measurements in the system, transmitted through
LEOS, the controller is able to obtain superior
performance in terms of damping interarea
oscillations compared to use of conventional
local signals. The main concept is to use
interarea signals for interarea controls
Wide area robust power system stability control
Low Earth Orbit Satellites LEOS
REGIONAL MEASUREMENTS
LOCAL
SPSS
MEASUREMENTS
9Hierarchical robust power system controller
Management Level
- Execution Level
- Signal pre-processor
- Actuator / Distributor
- Operation Level
- System modal identifier
- SPSS damping loop
- Management Level
- Fuzzy logic based parameter tuner
Operation Level
Execution Level
Control
Input Data
Power System
10Voltage Regulator With PSS and SPSS
Remote Signals
SPSS
Vt
PSS
??,?f, or Pa
Generator Excitation System
?
Ref
Voltage Regulator
Gen
-
Generator Field
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12Key issues
- Full scale nonlinear solution (transient
stability study) - Eigenvalues of the linearized system near the
operating point (small signal stability) - Line and component ratings
- Voltage ratings (maximum and minimum)
- Coherency - groups of generators swinging
together - Synchronizing torque, PSSs
- Acceptable operating conditions (including
operation within about 50 mHz of 60 Hz)
13Security
Market
Network
Communication systems
Internal Sources
Information decisions
Natural calamities
Intentional human acts
External Sources
Security refers to the ability of the system to
respond only to intended operator commands,
blocking all unintended operations
14Electric power system is vulnerable to failure
due to
-
-
- Natural disasters
- Deliberate attack
- Equipment failures
- Operator error
- Accidents
Tree-related events High load periods Software
failures
15Monitoring of electric power networks
Reduce Vulnerability
Underground Transmission Lines
Substations
Advanced
PMU
Transformers
EMS
Sensor Systems
Overhead Transmission Lines
16Energy management systems
Archiving
Sensory information
E M S
Generator controls
Command and control
Operator interaction
State estimator
17Network vulnerability reduction through virtual
sensor utilization
EMS
EMS
Virtual Data
Virtual Sensor Present
18Tradeoffs betweenvirtual and physical sensors
Low Cost Less Accurate
High Cost Greater Accuracy
Z H X
V
I
Physical Sensors
Virtual Sensors
19What is needed to enhance both security and
stability
- Ability to acquire and interpret extensive
real-time information from diverse sources,
ranging from sensors to satellites. Sensory data
used in Hx z state estimators to enhance system
performance. - Ability to quickly evaluate system vulnerability
with respect to catastrophic events in a market
environment involving competing, self-serving
agents - Ability to adapt protective device performance
based on system-wide and external system
assessment - Ability to reconfigure the power network to
minimize system vulnerability - Ability to develop system restoration plans to
minimize the impact of disruption
20Strategic Power Infrastructure Defense System
21Communication system for strategic power
infrastructure defense
Time synchronization (GPS) / Self healing /
Info. Exchange (LEO)
GPS or LEO satellite communication
Internet based communication channel
Internet based or more direct and faster
communication channel
Strategic power infrastructure main system
Intranet Ethernet or model based network is used
in the Intranet. Each Intranet can have a
gateway that handles IP addresses in the
Intranet
Internet or any other communication channel for a
number of Intranets
22The North American grid
NERC policies, rules, reliability, plans,
synchronous interconnections
23North American Electric Reliability Council
- Sets standards for the reliable operation and
planning - Monitors, assesses and enforces compliance with
standards - Provides education and training
- Assesses, analyzes and reports on bulk electric
system adequacy - Coordinates with Regional Reliability Councils
- Coordinates the provision of applications, data
and services - Certifies reliability service organizations and
personnel - Coordinates critical infrastructure protection
- Enables the reliable operation by facilitating
information exchange and coordination among
reliability service organizations - Administers procedures for appeals and conflict
resolution
24Weaknesses and strengths of the North American
grid
- Basic transmission design is over 40 years old.
Some basic distribution circuits are over 60
years old. - Never designed to handle high levels of bulk
power - Both transmission and generation constrained
- The impact of market driven exchange of power has
stressed the transmission grid - The transition to market based infrastructure has
stressed the newly created control entities
(e.g., ISOs) in an industry that is rapidly
loosing corporate memory
25The Northeast blackout of 2003
Time 8/14/2003 40957 PM EDT The first
significant events were initially recorded in
Michigan and Ohio
26The Northeast blackout of 2003
Time 8/14/03 041039 PM EDT The disturbance
was then recorded all over Michigan , Ohio , and
the city of Buffalo, NY
27The Northeast blackout of 2003
Time 8/14/03 041058 PM EDT 19 seconds later,
the disturbance had propagated to the eastern
seaboard.
28The Northeast blackout of 2003
- Main causes
- Failure of state estimator in MISO to model
external system changes - Combination of heavy power exchanges, high
reactive power flows, planned outages of
transmission circuits and planned outage of a
main generating facility (none of which are
unusual) - Operator error / training of MISO operators /
imprudent operation of an Ohio utility
(generation outages) - Unplanned unit and line outages
29The Northeast blackout of 2003
30The Northeast blackout of 2003
31Generation building boom of the past
200
180
160
140
120
GW Installed in Five Year Period
100
80
60
40
20
0
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
Coal
Oil
Gas
Nuclear
Other
32A hindsight view of the past building boom
Generation Building Boom Follows the Baby Boom
Labor Force Entry
35
200
180
30
160
25
140
120
20
Percent Change in Labor Force
100
GW Installed in Five Year Period
15
80
60
10
40
5
20
0
0
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
Coal
Oil
Gas
Nuclear
Other
33Generation building boom of the future
1400
Total System Generation Capacity
1200
1000
By 2020, the U.S. will need 1300 new power plants
at 300 MW each
GW
800
600
Cumulative Additions
400
200
0
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
34Employment at major IOUs
35- TRANSMISSION
- DISTRIBUTION
36The N9s problem
- Electric power quality
- Extreme bus voltage reliability, for example
'five nines' (i.e., 0.99999 availability), or six
nines or even higher - Utilization of new transmission and distribution
technologies for improvement of reliability - Utilization of distributed energy sources (DERs)
to improve reliability - Working with manufacturers of information
technology equipment to reduce load vulnerability
3724/7 UTILIZATION OF POWER SYSTEM ULTRA HIGH
RELIABILITY
INFORMATION PROCESSING, FINANCIAL SERVICES,
AIRLINES, POLICE, MILITARY
38Reliability enhancement
- Distributed rather than concentrated loads
- Loop circuits for distribution systems
- Information Technology and sensitive
manufacturing loads - Independence of energy sources
- Environmental issues
39- AS A RESPONSE TO THE 1993 TERRORIST BOMBING OF
THE WTC, THE PRIMARY DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM IN THE
BUILDING WAS IMPROVED TO KEEP THE POWER ON IN THE
CASE OF SEVERE DISRUPTION OF THE SUPPLY /
INTERRUPTION OF THE IN-BUILDING PRIMARY
DISTRIBUTION. THERE WERE TEN SUBSTATIONS IN EACH
WTC TOWER, ON FLOORS 7, 41, 75, AND 108, AND THE
SOUTH TOWER HAD AN ADDITIONAL TENANT OWNED DOUBLY
FED SUBSTATION ON FLOOR 43
40- THE USE OF MULTIPLE FEEDS, MULTIPLE SUBSTATIONS,
AND ISOLATED POWER SUPPLIES KEPT THE POWER ON IN
MOST OF THE WTC FOR 102 MINUTES AFTER THE INITIAL
STRIKE. IT IS BELIEVED THAT THIS WAS THE MAIN
FACTOR IN SAVING THE LIVES OF AS MANY AS 18,000
PEOPLE WHO ESCAPED FROM THE TOWERS BEFORE COLLAPSE
41Independence of sources
- The dependence of the sources will result in a
much higher outage rate than (1-P1)(1-P2)
42Modeling dependence of sources
- The dependence effect of multiple sources can be
modeled using a difference equation of the form - qn1 Cqn(1-C)(q1)1/n qn
- where qn 1-pn outage rate of circuit upon
addition of nth feeder, C is a correlation
coefficient - The (q1)1/n term is called a discounting term
and it accounts for increased potential for
dependence for cases of large n (large numbers of
feeders)
43Discounted model
- C 0 indicates no correlation between multiple
feeders - C 1 indicates the feeder outages among several
feeders are common mode
44Reliability of multiple feeds
The addition of feeders to improve reliability
has a diminishing effect. For practical cases,
use of more than three independent feeders of
100 capacity is counter- productive.
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46Probabilities of uncommon events
COMMON (?) Event_______
Loosing at roulette in Las Vegas bet on
00 Loosing the PowerBall lottery FAA design
criteria for aircraft
LIFE Probability, N 97.368,
1.6 99.99995, 6.3 0.999999999
0.999999999999, 9 to 12
POWER SYSTEM RELIABILITY Reliability N
Outage time 99.9 3 8h 45 min
/ yr 99.998631 4.9 1 day / 200 yrs 99.999
5 5 min 15 s / yr 99.99999 7
3.2 s / yr 99.999999 8 18.9 cycles /
yr 99.9999999 9 1.8 cycles / yr
47Solutions short range
- Distributed generation
- Added small generation units at all levels
- Conservation / electronic control of loads
- Investment in distribution systems
- Sharp increase in research in both transmission
and distribution engineering - Recruiting of students to the power area at all
levels - Improvement of software tools
48PROTON EXCHANGE MEMBRANE FUEL CELL - 7.5 kVA
- PHOSPHORIC ACID 250 kVA FUEL CELL
49Microturbines
- Low capacity, high speed units with electronic
interface with 60 Hz bus - Alternative fuel sources (e.g., biogas, gasifier,
pyrolysis, fuels that have less than 10 of heat
content compared to fossil fuels) - Catalytic combustor to reduce nitrous oxide
production - Heat recovery
- Lower capacities -- e.g.,
- 5 - 300 kVA
- High efficiency small units
- New IEEE standard requires disconnection from the
distribution system within a few cycles during
low voltage or outage events
50Solutions long term
- Added generation in larger units
- Local solutions for high reliability requirements
- Added capacity in distribution systems
- Adaptive islanding of interconnected systems
- Coordinate national energy policy with system
realities
51- The educational aspect of the problem
52U. S. Power engineering undergraduate
enrollments
53U. S. Power engineering graduate enrollments
200
M.S.E.E.
graduate degree recipients
150
100
50
Ph.D.
0
year
Source G.T. Heydt and V. Vittal, Feeding Our
Profession, IEEE Power Energy
Magazine, vol.1, issue 1, Jan/Feb 2003, pp 38-45
54The general electrical engineering reality
- There is a certain ebb and flow to the enrolments
in engineering nation-wide since the all-time
low in undergraduate engineering in 1998, there
has been an uninterrupted growth in enrolments - In many electrical and computer engineering
programs, the growing tendency to select the
computer engineering option has resulted in the
majority of students seeing little or no subject
matter relating to energy and power
55The general electrical engineering reality
- Given the decreasing number of electrical
engineering undergraduates, there is good
progress in stopping the precipitous decline in
the undergraduate power engineering enrolments to
the point where many power programs are
experiencing record levels
56Encouraging developments on the curriculum
front
- A determined movement away from the old straight
jacket curriculum to new enriched course
offerings with broadened choice - New developments are evident in three principal
thrusts - addition of microeconomic/finance elements
- introduction of energy, environment and public
policy aspects - wider array of power systems, power electronics
and machines/drives courses
57The impact of recent events
- Restructuring of electricity and the California
crisis sharpened public interest in electricity - The September 11, 2001 tragedy brought to
prominence the issue of the security of the North
American interconnected power system - The 2003 mega-blackout produced keen interest in
the reliability of the interconnected grid
58Conclusions
- Stability of power systems is a well understood
phenomenon, but complex numerical problem. - Stability enhancement controls are very complex
to design, but the present research thrusts and
engineering practice have yielded in-service
designs (or designs nearly in-service) that are
suitable to the task - The transition to a market based energy
infrastructure may not have been well thought
out, and system implications are just now being
remedied
59Conclusions
- Distribution engineering, long a step-child of
power engineering, is a focus of research
mainly related to high reliability, cost
reduction, and distributed generation sources - System security is a point of focus in
contemporary power engineering - Research on sensory systems is needed to enhance
system security - Power engineering education and the production of
power engineers at all levels seems to have a
significant impact on the health of the national
power system. It is unclear that the number of
engineers needed will be attained by US
educational institutions.