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Optimal operation & security analysis of power systems with flexible resources

The objective of this research is to present a comprehensive framework for harnessing the flexibility of power systems in the presence of unforeseen events, such as those associated with component outages or renewable energy variability. Increased penetration of variable resources in the power grid, mainly in the form of wind and solar plants, has resulted in variable power flow patterns, increased thermal unit cycling and higher reserve capacity requirements. Furthermore, the variability of renewable energy output has increased the system’s ramping requirements and threatens the system’s voltage control capabilities. However, new sources of flexibility and network control are emerging to address these problems. Specifically, energy storage systems, demand side management, distributed energy resources and flexible transmission operation can participate by providing ramping services and/or voltage control, as well as by alleviating transmission congestion. This research focuses on contributing to modeling and optimization approaches for scheduling the operation of these sources of flexibility in a certain look-ahead horizon, ensuring a state of the art level of modeling accuracy, with full inclusion of voltage control considerations which do not exist in current DC-OPF modeling approaches. Also, by including reactive power flows, the network congestion model proposed is above par compared to the current state-of-the-art for look-ahead dispatch literature. Nevertheless, the model is further expanded by including a thermal model for transmission lines, which allows for the implementation of dynamic line ratings in look-ahead economic dispatch. The benefits from these augmented modeling capabilities are documented and compared with current operating practices.
Once an AC-OPF look-ahead optimization problem has been established, and the corresponding components have been modeled, further contributions are made in the area of remedial action schemes. The developed formulations allow for the identification of appropriate corrective actions that will restore feasibility in infeasible cases.
Finally, a combination of contingency filtering and contingency analysis approaches is developed, to allow for fast identification and analysis of critical outages in the transmission system. The filtering approach is based on a basic Taylor expansion of network power flow equations as well as a new formulation of margin indices that directly quantify the proximity to constraint violation in the post-outage system state. The analysis approach is based on low-rank modifications of the Jacobian matrix of network equations, to produce good estimates of post-outage operating states and map the effect on the system’s operating constraints. Compared to current state of the art, advances are made both in the speed and the accuracy of the analysis, since the proposed filtering and analysis methods are fully unbalanced. The need for unbalanced security analysis is discussed and justified.
Through the contributions made in this research, a roadmap to increase flexibility in power system operations is developed. Namely, an enhanced modeling capability allows for integration of additional sources of flexibility and voltage control and a highly accurate security analysis and remedial actions formulation allows for improved response to unforeseen critical outages and rapid generation changes.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/54378
Date07 January 2016
CreatorsPolymeneas, Evangelos
ContributorsMeliopoulos, Sakis
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
Formatapplication/pdf

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