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ECE 476 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS

ECE 476 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS. Lecture 23 Transient Stability Professor Tom Overbye Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Announcements. Be reading Chapter 11 and Chapter 12 thru 12.3 HW 10 is 11.4, 11.7, 11.10, 11.19, 11.20; due Dec 1 in class.

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ECE 476 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS

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  1. ECE 476POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS Lecture 23 Transient Stability Professor Tom Overbye Department of Electrical andComputer Engineering

  2. Announcements • Be reading Chapter 11 and Chapter 12 thru 12.3 • HW 10 is 11.4, 11.7, 11.10, 11.19, 11.20; due Dec 1 in class. • Project is due Thursday Dec 1 in class.

  3. Lightning Propagation Switching Surges Stator Transients and Subsynchronous Resonance Transient Stability Governor and Load Frequency Control Boiler/Long-Term Dynamics 10-7 10-5 10-3 0.1 10 103 105 Time (Seconds) Power System Time Scales Voltage Stability Power Flow Image source: P.W. Sauer, M.A. Pai, Power System Dynamics and Stability, 1997, Fig 1.2, modified

  4. Power Grid Disturbance Example Figures show the frequency change as a result of the sudden loss of a large amount of generation in the Southern WECC Green is bus quite close to location of generator trip while blue and red are Alberta buses. Black is BPA. Time in Seconds Frequency Contour

  5. Frequency Response for Gen. Loss • In response to rapid loss of generation, in the initial seconds the system frequency will decrease as energy stored in the rotating masses is transformed into electric energy • Solar PV has no inertia, and for most new wind turbines the inertia is not seen by the system • Within seconds governors respond, increasing power output of controllable generation • Solar PV and wind are usually operated at maximum power so they have no reserves to contribute

  6. Generator Electrical Model • The simplest generator model, known as the classical model, treats the generator as a voltage source behind the direct-axis transient reactance; the voltage magnitude is fixed, but its angle changes according to the mechanical dynamics

  7. Generator Mechanical Model Generator Mechanical Block Diagram

  8. Generator Mechanical Model, cont’d

  9. Generator Mechanical Model, cont’d

  10. Generator Mechanical Model, cont’d

  11. Generator Swing Equation

  12. Single Machine Infinite Bus (SMIB) • To understand the transient stability problem we’ll first consider the case of a single machine (generator) connected to a power system bus with a fixed voltage magnitude and angle (known as an infinite bus) through a transmission line with impedance jXL

  13. SMIB, cont’d

  14. SMIB Equilibrium Points

  15. Transient Stability Analysis • For transient stability analysis we need to consider three systems • Prefault - before the fault occurs the system is assumed to be at an equilibrium point • Faulted - the fault changes the system equations, moving the system away from its equilibrium point • Postfault - after fault is cleared the system hopefully returns to a new operating point

  16. Transient Stability Solution Methods • There are two methods for solving the transient stability problem • Numerical integration • this is by far the most common technique, particularly for large systems; during the fault and after the fault the power system differential equations are solved using numerical methods • Direct or energy methods; for a two bus system this method is known as the equal area criteria • mostly used to provide an intuitive insight into the transient stability problem

  17. SMIB Example • Assume a generator is supplying power to an infinite bus through two parallel transmission lines. Then a balanced three phase fault occurs at the terminal of one of the lines. The fault is cleared by the opening of this line’s circuit breakers.

  18. SMIB Example, cont’d Simplified prefault system

  19. SMIB Example, Faulted System During the fault the system changes The equivalent system during the fault is then During this fault no power can be transferred from the generator to the system

  20. SMIB Example, Post Fault System After the fault the system again changes The equivalent system after the fault is then

  21. SMIB Example, Dynamics

  22. Transient Stability Solution Methods • There are two methods for solving the transient stability problem • Numerical integration • this is by far the most common technique, particularly for large systems; during the fault and after the fault the power system differential equations are solved using numerical methods • Direct or energy methods; for a two bus system this method is known as the equal area criteria • mostly used to provide an intuitive insight into the transient stability problem

  23. Transient Stability Analysis • For transient stability analysis we need to consider three systems • Prefault - before the fault occurs the system is assumed to be at an equilibrium point • Faulted - the fault changes the system equations, moving the system away from its equilibrium point • Postfault - after fault is cleared the system hopefully returns to a new operating point

  24. Transient Stability Solution Methods • There are two methods for solving the transient stability problem • Numerical integration • this is by far the most common technique, particularly for large systems; during the fault and after the fault the power system differential equations are solved using numerical methods • Direct or energy methods; for a two bus system this method is known as the equal area criteria • mostly used to provide an intuitive insight into the transient stability problem

  25. Numerical Integration of DEs

  26. Examples

  27. Euler’s Method

  28. Euler’s Method Algorithm

  29. Euler’s Method Example 1

  30. Euler’s Method Example 1, cont’d

  31. Euler’s Method Example 2

  32. Euler's Method Example 2, cont'd

  33. Euler's Method Example 2, cont'd

  34. Euler's Method Example 2, cont'd Below is a comparison of the solution values for x1(t) at time t = 10 seconds

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