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
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;
Conference_Titel :
Smart Grid Communications (SmartGridComm), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
DOI :
10.1109/SmartGridComm.2013.6687938