DocumentCode
1248701
Title
A distributed computing approach for real-time transient stability analysis
Author
Aloisio, G. ; Bochicchio, M.A. ; Scala, M. La ; Sbrizzai, R.
Author_Institution
Lecce Univ., Italy
Volume
12
Issue
2
fYear
1997
fDate
5/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
981
Lastpage
987
Abstract
Power system online dynamic security assessment (DSA) is a challenging computing problem. A key problem in DSA is the analysis of a large number of dynamic stability contingencies every 10-20 minutes using online data. In order to speed up the transient stability analysis, parallel processing has been applied and several results can be found in the literature. In this paper, the authors present a distributed approach for real-time transient stability analysis. Distributed computing is economically attractive providing the processing power of supercomputing at a lower cost. Several distributed software environments like the parallel virtual machine (PVM) allow an effective use of heterogeneous clusters of workstations. Both functional and domain decomposition of the transient stability problem were tested under PVM on a homogeneous cluster of eight DEC ALPHA and on an IBM SP2 machine. Functional decomposition has been obtained by the Shifted-Picard algorithm, whereas domain decomposition has been obtained concurrently running different contingencies on different nodes of the cluster, using the very dishonest Newton algorithm. In order to assess the performance of these approaches, time domain simulations, adopting detailed modeling for synchronous machines, have been carried out on a realistic-sized power network comprising 2583 buses and 511 generators
Keywords
electric machine analysis computing; machine theory; parallel algorithms; power system analysis computing; power system security; power system stability; power system transients; real-time systems; transient analysis; DEC ALPHA; IBM SP2; buses; computer simulation; distributed computing approach; distributed software environments; domain decomposition; dynamic stability contingencies; functional decomposition; generators; heterogeneous workstation clusters; parallel processing; parallel virtual machine; power system online dynamic security assessment; real-time transient stability analysis; shifted-Picard algorithm; supercomputing; synchronous machines; very dishonest Newton algorithm; Clustering algorithms; Data security; Distributed computing; Power system analysis computing; Power system dynamics; Power system security; Power system stability; Power system transients; Stability analysis; Transient analysis;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8950
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/59.589801
Filename
589801
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