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Stability Issues in Entergy System Entergy Transmission Planning Summit New Orleans, LA July 10, 2003. Classification of Power System Stability. Transient/Angle Stability Voltage Stability Small Signal/Oscillatory Stability. Static Voltage Stability Criteria.
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Stability Issues in Entergy System Entergy Transmission Planning Summit New Orleans, LA July 10, 2003
Classification of Power System Stability • Transient/Angle Stability • Voltage Stability • Small Signal/Oscillatory Stability
Static Voltage Stability Criteria Limits Corresponding to Voltage Decline Criteria Limits Corresponding to 5 % margin from Nose Point Nose Point ( point before voltage collapse)
Areas of Stability Concern in 2002 I. Joint Stability Study between Entergy, Southern, and TVA North Arkansas Northwest Quadrant West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana II. McKnight-Franklin Flow Limits III. Stability problem in WOTAB Area
Results/Northwest Quadrant • New generation added without PSS severely deteriorated system damping. • The most limiting contingency from a damping standpoint was the Miller - Bellefonte 500 kV line. • The most limiting contingency from a voltage standpoint was the Farley - Mitchell 500 kV line. • With PSS on new generating units, the export limits were found to be 3,850 MW. • Current Status: Problem doesn’t exist any more due to cancellation of some IPP generation.
Problem Area North Arkansas Mississippi West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana
Results/Southeast Louisiana • Angle Stability limits found to be slightly lower than voltage stability limits • Rating of the McKnight-Franklin 500kV line limited to 2,070 MVA due to unacceptable damping • With Webre-Richard out of service, the flow limit is 1,958 MVA • With Daniel-McKnight out of service, the flow limit is 1,522 MVA • No transient voltage security violations observed
Problem Area North Arkansas Mississippi West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana
Results/WOTAB • The limiting contingency is the Mt. Olive - Hartburg 500 kV line. • Without PSS, the limit is 2,700 MW based on damping criteria ( < 3% damping). • With PSS on new generating units, the export limit was found to be 3300 MW based on voltage collapse criteria. • Limit based on voltage decline criteria (0.92 pu) is 2,100 MW. • Major transmission improvements may be required to increase export limits.
New Areas of Stability Concern North Arkansas Mississippi West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana V. Western Region Voltage Stability IV. Amite South Stability
Problem Area North Arkansas Mississippi West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana Amite South Region
Background • Major Load Center • Large Concentration of Generation • Expected 2003 conditions: • 6,280 MW of load (including CLECO & LaGEN loads) • 8,400 MW of native and new generation
Background • 230 kV loop out of Waterford is critical • Approximately 3,100 MW generation in the loop • System stable for primary clearing faults • Additional generation can lead to instability for stuck breaker faults
Results • Under stuck breaker faults • Fault clearing time very important for the stability of the region • Units in Amite south region and close vicinity can separate from the rest of the system • Can lead to lines tripping
Solutions Proposed • Faster fault clearing devices (relays, breakers) • Remedial action scheme to trip certain units to protect against stuck breaker fault conditions • Power system stabilizers on the new units • IPO breakers
Areas of Stability Concern North Arkansas Mississippi West of the Atchafalaya Basin (WOTAB) Southeast Louisiana Western Region
Background • Western Region load growth: ~ 5.1% • Generation sources: Two Lewis Creek units (226MW & 230MW, 150 MVAR each) • With one Lewis Creek unit out of service, certain line outages can cause low voltages leading to potential voltage collapse. • Critical tie lines are Grimes – Crockett 345 kV and China – Jacinto 230 kV.
Background • Currently, Under Voltage Load Shedding (UVLS) scheme is in place. • Voltage at critical buses below 0.92 pu • Loss of both Lewis Creek generators • Lewis Creek units go into over excitation mode • Series Compensation on China – Jacinto 230 kV line • Static capacitors installed – 770 MVAR • Two D-SMES units (8 MVA each) installed at New Caney and Metro in 2001
Power – Voltage (P-V) CurveLoss of one Lewis Creek unit and Grimes – Crockett 345 kV line
Results for 2005 Summer Peak • Voltage Instability • Slow voltage recovery • Several motor loads at risk • Depressed voltages can lead to UVLS operation
Possible Solutions • Static Devices – MS Shunt Cap Banks • Series Compensation • New transmission facilities (for details, see EGSI-TX’s area planning presentation) • Dynamic VAR support device (e.g., SVC, STATCOM, D-SMES)
System Stability Summary • PSS installation mandatory for all new generation locating on the Entergy system • PSS tuning mandatory in WOTAB and Southeast Louisiana • Traditional methods are needed to fix stability problems (alleviate thermal constraints, additional static reactive power support devices, series compensation) • New technologies (FACTS devices, e.g., SVC, STATCOM, D-SMES, UPFC, etc.) may be required.