DocumentCode :
1708772
Title :
Temperature Effect to Distribution Feeder Load Profiles and Losses
Author :
Lin, C.H. ; Chen, C.S. ; Kang, M.S. ; Ku, T.T. ; Huang, J.S. ; Chiou, Z.S. ; Huang, C.W.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Kaohsiung Univ. of Appl. Sci., Kaohsiung
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
7
Abstract :
A systematic procedure is proposed to study the effect to temperature change to distribution feeder load profiles and losses by using the typical load patterns of customer classes. The database of an automated mapping/facility management (AM/FM) system is used to retrieve the component attributes and the topology process is executed to determine the electrical network configuration and the customers served by each distribution transformer. By using the monthly energy consumption of customers in customer information system (CIS) and the typical daily load patterns of customer classes, the hourly loading profiles of distribution transformers and service zones can be derived to solve the loadings of each primary feeder and lateral. The sensitivity analysis of load demand with respect to the temperature change for each customer class is performed by statistic regression according to the actual customer power consumption and temperature data. The load contribution by each customer class is updated by the corresponding temperature sensitivity and integrated together to form the new load profile of a service district with temperature change. To investigate the temperature effect to the distribution feeder, two of the Taipower distribution feeders are selected for computer simulation. The power demand at each load bus of the distribution feeder is calculated by applying the temperature sensitivity and the three- phase load flow analysis is then executed to find the new feeder loading and power loss with the temperature change.
Keywords :
distributed power generation; losses; power consumption; power system management; power transformers; sensitivity analysis; Taipower distribution feeders; automated mapping; customer classes; customer information system; distribution feeder load profiles; distribution transformer; electrical network configuration; facility management; load demand; power consumption; power loss; sensitivity analysis; statistic regression; temperature effect; temperature sensitivity; three-phase load flow analysis; Computational Intelligence Society; Databases; Energy consumption; Information retrieval; Management information systems; Network topology; Sensitivity analysis; Statistical analysis; Temperature distribution; Temperature sensors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power System Technology, 2006. PowerCon 2006. International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Chongqing
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0110-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0111-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICPST.2006.321962
Filename :
4116253
Link To Document :
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