DocumentCode
1144815
Title
A hybrid method for observability analysis using a reduced network graph theory
Author
Korres, George N. ; Katsikas, Peter J.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Nat. Tech. Univ. of Athens, Greece
Volume
18
Issue
1
fYear
2003
fDate
2/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
295
Lastpage
304
Abstract
This paper presents a hybrid topological-numerical approach for observability analysis in power system state estimation. By partitioning the network in observable areas, a reduced network is formed, where each area is represented by a supernode and each line between areas as a branch. The authors select as areas the flow islands, being the maximal connected components of flow-measured branches. Only boundary nodes and injections at flow islands are retained for numerical processing. Observability testing and identification of maximal observable islands are accomplished by numerical processing on the echelon form of a rectangular test matrix, which is based on the reduced network graph properties. The method uses a noniterative scheme to select a minimal set of nonredundant pseudo measurements which make an unobservable network barely observable. The existing numerical methods are based on the number of zero pivots obtained during the triangular factorization of the gain matrix. Due to round-off errors, the zero pivots may be misclassified. In the proposed method, the nonzero values of the processed test matrix are +1 or -1, resulting in better numerical conditioning and accurate detection of zero pivots. The test matrix is generally sparser than the reduced network gain matrix. As a consequence, the proposed method is faster either for observability testing or multiple measurement placement. Several test results are presented.
Keywords
control system analysis; graph theory; observability; power system control; power system state estimation; boundary nodes; control simulation; flow islands; hybrid observability analysis method; hybrid topological-numerical approach; injections; noniterative scheme; nonredundant pseudo measurements; power system state estimation; reduced network graph theory; round-off errors; zero pivots; Graph theory; Helium; Hybrid power systems; Jacobian matrices; Observability; Performance evaluation; Power system analysis computing; Roundoff errors; State estimation; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8950
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPWRS.2002.807072
Filename
1178811
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