Return to search

Long term voltage stability analysis for small disturbances

This dissertation attempts to establish an analytical and comprehensive framework to deal
with two critical challenges associated with voltage stability analysis:
1. To study the new competitive environment appropriately and give more incentive
for reactive power supports, one has to evaluate the impacts of distributed market
forces on voltage stability, which complicates the voltage stability analysis.
2. Accurately estimating voltage stability margin online is always the goal of the
industry. Industry used to apply static analysis for its computation speed at the
cost of losing accuracy. On the other hand, dynamic analysis can result in more
accurate estimation, but generally has a huge computation cost. So a challenge is
to estimate the voltage stability margin accurately and efficiently at a reasonable
cost, especially for large system.
Considering the first challenge, this dissertation applied eigenvalue based bifurcation
analysis to allocate the contribution of voltage stability. We investigate how parameters of
the system influence the bifurcations. Three bifurcations (singularity induced bifurcation,
saddle-node and Hopf bifurcation) and their relationship to several commonly used
controllers are analyzed. Their parameters’ impact on these bifurcations have been
investigated, from which we found a way to allocate the contribution by analyzing the
relative positions of the bifurcations.
For the second challenge, a new fast numerical scheme is developed to estimate voltage
stability margin by intelligently adjusting the load increase ratio. A criterion, named EMD
(Equilibrium Manifold Deviation) criterion, is proposed to gauge the accuracy of the estimation. And based on this criterion, a new computation scheme is proposed. The
validity of our new approach is proven based on the well-known Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg
method, and can be extended to other explicit single-step methods easily. Numerical tests
demonstrate that the new approach is very practical and has great potential for industrial
applications.
This dissertation extends our new numerical scheme to stiff systems. When a system is
ill-conditioned, the implicit method would be applied to achieve numerical stability. We
further demonstrate the validity to combine the intelligent load adjustment technique with
the implicit method to save the computation cost without loss of accuracy. This dissertation
also delves into the auto detection of stiffness of the power system, and extends our new
numerical scheme to general sytems.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2499
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsMen, Kun
ContributorsHuang, Garng M.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

Page generated in 0.0026 seconds