DocumentCode
70201
Title
Experimental Determination of the ZIP Coefficients for Modern Residential, Commercial, and Industrial Loads
Author
Bokhari, Abdullah ; Alkan, Ali ; Dogan, Rasim ; Diaz-Aguilo, Marc ; de Leon, Francisco ; Czarkowski, Dariusz ; Zabar, Zivan ; Birenbaum, Leo ; Noel, Adam ; Uosef, Resk
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., New York Univ., New York, NY, USA
Volume
29
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
Jun-14
Firstpage
1372
Lastpage
1381
Abstract
This paper presents the experimental determination of the ZIP coefficients model to represent (static) modern loads under varying voltage conditions. ZIP are the coefficients of a load model comprised of constant impedance Z, constant current I, and constant power P loads. A ZIP coefficient load model is used to represent power consumed by a load as a function of voltage. A series of surveys was performed on typical residential, commercial, and industrial customers in New York City. Household appliances and industrial equipment found in the different locations were tested in the laboratory by varying the voltage from 1.1-p.u. voltage to 0 and back to 1.1 pu in steps of 3 V to obtain the individual P- V, Q- V, and I- V characteristics. Customer load tables were built using seasonal factors and duty cycles to form weighted contributions for each device in every customer class. The loads found in several residential classes were assembled and tested in the lab. It was found that modern appliances behave quite differently than older appliances even from only 10 years back. Models of the different customer classes were validated against actual recordings of load variations under voltage reduction.
Keywords
domestic appliances; electric current; electric impedance; electricity supply industry; industrial power systems; load (electric); power consumption; I-V characteristics; New York City; P-V characteristics; Q-V characteristics; ZIP coefficient load model; commercial loads; constant current; constant impedance; constant power loads; customer class; customer load tables; duty cycles; experimental determination; household appliances; industrial equipment; industrial loads; modern appliances; modern loads; older appliances; residential classes; residential loads; seasonal factors; voltage reduction; Cities and towns; Home appliances; Impedance; Load management; Load modeling; Power demand; Reactive power; Commercial class; ZIP coefficients; industrial class; load characteristic; load composition; load model; residential class;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8977
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPWRD.2013.2285096
Filename
6648709
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