DocumentCode
656707
Title
Dynamic modeling and resilience for power distribution
Author
Yun Wei ; Chuanyi Ji ; Galvan, Floyd ; Couvillon, Stephen ; Orellana, G.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
21-24 Oct. 2013
Firstpage
85
Lastpage
90
Abstract
Resilience of power distribution is pertinent to the energy grid under severe weather. This work develops an analytical formulation for large-scale failure and recovery of power distribution induced by severe weather. A focus is on incorporating pertinent characteristics of topological network structures into spatial temporal modeling. Such characteristics are new notations as dynamic failure- and recovery-neighborhoods. The neighborhoods quantify correlated failures and recoveries due to topology and types of components in power distribution. The resulting model is a multi-scale non-stationary spatial temporal random process. Dynamic resilience is then defined based on the model. Using the model and large-scale real data from Hurricane Ike, unique characteristics are identified: The failures follow the 80/20 rule where 74.3% of the total failures result from 20.7% of failure neighborhoods with up to 72 components “failed” together. Thus the hurricane caused a large number of correlated failures. Unlike the failures, the recoveries follow 60/90 rule: 59.3% of recoveries resulted from 92.7% of all neighborhoods where either one component alone or two together recovered. Thus about 60% recoveries were uncorrelated and required individual restorations. The failure and recovery processes are further studied through the resilience metric to identify the least resilient regions and time durations.
Keywords
distribution networks; power grids; power system identification; power system restoration; power system simulation; random processes; Hurricane Ike; dynamic failure-neighborhood; dynamic recovery-neighborhood; energy grid; large-scale failure formulation; large-scale recovery formulation; multiscale nonstationary spatial temporal random process; power distribution resilience; power system restoration; spatial temporal modeling; topological network structure; Aging; Hurricanes; Measurement; Meteorology; Power distribution; Power system dynamics; Resilience;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Smart Grid Communications (SmartGridComm), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SmartGridComm.2013.6687938
Filename
6687938
Link To Document