DocumentCode :
2393833
Title :
Understanding and solving short-term voltage stability problems
Author :
De Leon, John A Diaz, II ; Taylor, Carson W.
Author_Institution :
American Supercond., Middleton, WI, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2002
fDate :
25-25 July 2002
Firstpage :
745
Abstract :
Based on actual incidents, short-term voltage instability is an increasing, but often overlooked, industry concern. A common scenario is a large disturbance such as a multi-phase fault near a load center that decelerate motor loads. Following fault clearing with transmission outages, motors raw very high current while simultaneously attempting to reaccelerate, and may stall if the power system is weak. Massive loss of load and possibly area instability and voltage collapse may follow. The authors describe actual incidents. Fast-acting generator excitation controls, fast-acting reactive power support devices (SVC, STATCOM, SMES), or fast load shedding can prevent voltage collapse. Proper analysis requires dynamic modeling of aggregated motor loads, with equivalents for distribution feeders. Power electronic based voltage support devices must be realistically modeled to determine required size, location, number, and type. Based on simulations, they conclude that voltage-sourced converter devices (STATCOM, SMES) are attractive countermeasures against load loss and voltage collapse. Factory built distribution-connected distributed devices may be cost-effective compared to larger transmission-connected devices.
Keywords :
electric motors; load shedding; power system control; power system dynamic stability; power system faults; reactive power control; static VAr compensators; superconducting magnet energy storage; SMES; STATCOM; SVC; aggregated motor loads dynamic modeling; distribution-connected distributed devices; fast load shedding; fast-acting generator excitation controls; fast-acting reactive power support devices; fault clearing; loss of load; multi-phase fault; short-term voltage stability problems; transmission outages; voltage collapse; Automatic voltage control; Power generation; Power system analysis computing; Power system dynamics; Power system faults; Power system modeling; Reactive power control; Samarium; Stability; Voltage control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power Engineering Society Summer Meeting, 2002 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7518-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PESS.2002.1043412
Filename :
1043412
Link To Document :
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