DocumentCode
1269337
Title
Power station GIS design and implementation
Author
Ma, Suxia ; Qi, Linhai ; Liu, Wenxia ; Ma, Wei
Author_Institution
North China Inst. of Electr. Power, Beijing, China
Volume
15
Issue
2
fYear
2002
fDate
4/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
41
Lastpage
45
Abstract
In power station management information systems (MIS), an important function is to manage electric facilities (e.g., equipment of main workshop, pipelines). Electric facilities have obvious features: their number is large and they are geographically related. The number of pipelines can reach about 40 types. Most pipelines are under ground and constitute very complicated networks. During the construction and development of a power station, these networks are changed at different extents. It is clumsy to modify paper maps, and paper maps easily become obsolete and are easily damaged. In addition, when the power station needs new buildings or needs maintenance work to pipelines, the worker should know their geographical distribution. These problems can be solved efficiently using GIS. In the facility management of power stations, facility maintenance management is a very important part, including heavy repair, routine maintenance, and facility defect management. At present, there has been mature management software for equipment maintenance and repair. Integrating these with GIS can enhance visual and graphical effects. Because of the large amount of equipment and the complexity of the pipeline network, the management requirements for administrators are very high. Applying GIS and network technology to power stations can implement centralized and graphical management of pipelines, equipment, workshops, and geographical related information and can provide data sharing, modern management methods, and decision-making support
Keywords
geographic information systems; maintenance engineering; power engineering computing; power stations; GIS; centralized management; data sharing; decision-making support; electric facilities management; facility defect management; facility maintenance management; geographic information systems; graphical effects; graphical management; heavy repair; maintenance work; pipelines; power station management information systems; routine maintenance; visual effects; Buildings; Decision making; Energy management; Geographic Information Systems; Management information systems; Pipelines; Power generation; Power system management; Software maintenance; Technology management;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer Applications in Power, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0895-0156
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/67.993759
Filename
993759
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