DocumentCode :
1390372
Title :
Tales from the Frontline: Keys to Successful Self-Healing Distribution Projects
Author :
Maurer, Linus ; Stevens, Andrew ; Reder, Wanda
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
100
Lastpage :
106
Abstract :
Self-healing is a critical aspect of the smart grid offering significant opportunity for reliability improvement. The average duration of outages on a system (SAIDI) can be cut in half with a self-healing network on a simple open-loop circuit with one sectionalizing point assuming the customers are evenly distributed and the fault rate is uniform. The goal of a self-healing network is to automatically restore the un-faulted sections of a feeder within the time defined as an “interruption” which is less than 5 minutes, as defined by IEEE 1366. The term “self-healing” may be misleading because thefault itself is not automatically repaired. Instead, the term “self-healing” really means the system automatically reconfigures around a fault to restore as many customers as possible without human intervention. This is done while line crews are dispatched to the faulted section to fix it.
Keywords :
power distribution reliability; smart power grids; IEEE 1366; SAIDI; open-loop circuit; reliability improvement; self-healing distribution projects; self-healing network; smart grid; Automation; Batteries; Circuit faults; Communication systems; Smart grids; Switches; Training;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power and Energy Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1540-7977
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MPE.2014.2322297
Filename :
6825990
Link To Document :
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