DocumentCode
1864708
Title
The influence of model mismatch to power system calculation, part II: on the stability calculation
Author
Anjia, Mao ; Zhizhong, Guo
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Harbin Inst. of Technol.
fYear
2005
fDate
Nov. 29 2005-Dec. 2 2005
Firstpage
1127
Abstract
Secure and reliable operation of power system is significant for nation´s economy development and society stability. To ascertain this, analysis and calculation plays an important role. Power system calculations can be classified into three categories in time domain: for the past, for the present and for the future respectively. And the calculations for the future seem to be more significant to support power system operation and make production arrangement. However, almost all the calculations of power system are based on the mathematic models established from the physical system; and the models may have various errors and mismatch the actual system, especially for the calculations facing the future. The mismatch between calculation model and actual system influences the analysis result and the operation of power system. Aimed at the possible mismatch between calculation model and actual power system, this paper analyzes the influences of bus operating mode, transmission line operating mode, load distribution and quantity respectively on power system transient stability. The results show that the mismatch of grid structure can influence power system stability more greatly than loads do. As the mismatch between calculation model and actual system always exists, this paper also suggests that power system analysis should depend more on measurements rather than calculation model
Keywords
load distribution; power system security; power system transient stability; power transmission reliability; time-domain analysis; bus operating mode; load distribution; model mismatch; power system calculation; power system calculations; power system reliability; power system security; power system transient stability; production arrangement; time domain; transmission line operating mode; Mathematical model; Mathematics; Power system analysis computing; Power system modeling; Power system reliability; Power system stability; Power system transients; Power transmission lines; Production systems; Stability analysis; T error analysis; WAMS; model mismatch; power system; transient stability analysis;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Engineering Conference, 2005. IPEC 2005. The 7th International
Conference_Location
Singapore
Print_ISBN
981-05-5702-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPEC.2005.207076
Filename
1627365
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