Title :
Evaluating the Effect of Upgrade, Control and Development Strategies on Robustness and Failure Risk of the Power Transmission Grid
Author :
Newman, D.E. ; Carreras, B.A. ; Lynch, V.E. ; Dobson, I.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Alaska, Fairbanks
Abstract :
We use the OPA complex systems model of the power transmission system to investigate the effect of a series of different network upgrade scenarios on the long time dynamics and the probability of large cascading failures. The OPA model represents the power grid at the level of DC load flow and LP generation dispatch and represents blackouts caused by randomly triggered cascading line outages and overloads. We examine the effect of increased component reliability on the long-term risks, the effect of changing operational margins and the effect of redundancy on those same long-term risks. The general result is that while increased reliability of the components decreases the probability of small blackouts, depending on the implementation, it actually can increase the probability of large blackouts. When we instead increase some types of redundancy of the system there is an overall decrease in the large blackouts. As some of these results are counter intuitive these studies suggest that care must be taken when making what seem to be logical upgrade decisions.
Keywords :
cascade systems; failure analysis; load flow; power grids; power transmission control; power transmission reliability; probability; risk analysis; robust control; DC load flow; LP generation dispatch; OPA complex system model; cascading failure risk; component reliability; power transmission grid; power transmission system; probability; robustness control; DC generators; Load flow; Power grids; Power system dynamics; Power system faults; Power system modeling; Power system protection; Power transmission; Redundancy; Robust control;
Conference_Titel :
Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Proceedings of the 41st Annual
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2008.152