Title :
Optimal reactive planning with security constraints
Author :
Thomas, W.R. ; Dixon, A.M. ; Cheng, D.T.Y. ; Dunnett, R.M. ; Schaff, G. ; Thorp, J.D.
Author_Institution :
Div. of Technol. & Sci., Nat. Grid. Co. Plc., Leatherhead, UK
Abstract :
The National Grid Company (NGC) of England and Wales has developed a computer program, SCORPION, to help system planners optimize the location and size of new reactive compensation plant on the transmission system. The reactive power requirements of the NGC system have risen as a result of increased power flows and the shorter timescale on which power stations are commissioned and withdrawn from service. In view of the high costs involved, it is important that reactive compensation be installed as economically as possible, without compromising security. Traditional methods based on iterative use of a load flow program are labour intensive and subjective. SCORPION determines a near-optimal pattern of new reactive sources which are required to satisfy voltage constraints for normal and contingent states of operation of the transmission system. The algorithm processes the system states sequentially, instead of optimizing all of them simultaneously. This allows a large number of power system states to be considered with an acceptable run time and computer memory requirement. Installed reactive sources are treated as continuous, rather than discrete, variables. However, the program has a restart facility which enables the user to add realistically sized reactive sources explicitly and thereby work towards a realizable solution to the planning problem
Keywords :
compensation; digital simulation; optimisation; power system analysis computing; power system planning; power system security; reactive power; software packages; transmission networks; SCORPION; VAr compensation; algorithm; computer memory; computer simulation; optimal reactive power planning; power flows; power stations; run time; transmission system; voltage constraints; Costs; Grid computing; Load flow; National security; Power generation; Power generation economics; Power system economics; Power system planning; Power system security; Reactive power;
Conference_Titel :
Power Industry Computer Application Conference, 1995. Conference Proceedings., 1995 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Salt Lake City, UT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2663-6
DOI :
10.1109/PICA.1995.515168