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Incorporating voltage security into the planning, operation and monitoring of restructured electric energy marketsNair, Nirmal-Kumar 12 April 2006 (has links)
As open access market principles are applied to power systems, significant changes
are happening in their planning, operation and control. In the emerging marketplace,
systems are operating under higher loading conditions as markets focus greater attention
to operating costs than stability and security margins. Since operating stability is a basic
requirement for any power system, there is need for newer tools to ensure stability and
security margins being strictly enforced in the competitive marketplace. This dissertation
investigates issues associated with incorporating voltage security into the unbundled
operating environment of electricity markets. It includes addressing voltage security in
the monitoring, operational and planning horizons of restructured power system.
This dissertation presents a new decomposition procedure to estimate voltage
security usage by transactions. The procedure follows physical law and uses an index
that can be monitored knowing the state of the system. The expression derived is based
on composite market coordination models that have both PoolCo and OpCo transactions,
in a shared stressed transmission grid. Our procedure is able to equitably distinguish the
impacts of individual transactions on voltage stability, at load buses, in a simple and fast
manner.
This dissertation formulates a new voltage stability constrained optimal power flow
(VSCOPF) using a simple voltage security index. In modern planning, composite power
system reliability analysis that encompasses both adequacy and security issues is being
developed. We have illustrated the applicability of our VSCOPF into composite
reliability analysis.
This dissertation also delves into the various applications of voltage security index.
Increasingly, FACT devices are being used in restructured markets to mitigate a variety
of operational problems. Their control effects on voltage security would be
demonstrated using our VSCOPF procedure. Further, this dissertation investigates the
application of steady state voltage stability index to detect potential dynamic voltage
collapse.
Finally, this dissertation examines developments in representation, standardization,
communication and exchange of power system data. Power system data is the key input
to all analytical engines for system operation, monitoring and control. Data exchange
and dissemination could impact voltage security evaluation and therefore needs to be
critically examined.
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