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This thesis addresses scheduling conventional generation units keeping in view the low
voltage problem. In a power system low voltage occurs when requisite reactive power
support is not available. The problem will aggravate further in emerging power systems
which will have electricity market oriented operation and large scale penetration of
intermittent renewable based generation resources. Market operation makes the reactive
power supports often scarce. Renewable sources involve DC-AC or AC-DC-AC conversion
requiring adequate reactive power support. Besides this, renewable sources themselves may
be unavailable totally in non-congenial weather.
Voltage management through transformer tap changing, line switching, capacitor switching
and lastly load shedding has long been practiced in power industry. But these may end up in
voltage collapse or voltage instability due to hitting the ceiling (limit) of these
devices/actions. So bus voltage in problematic areas may be improved if the generators in
their neighborhoods can be scheduled. This is because reactive power is less mobile (i.e.
cannot flow over a long distance unlike real power), and generators are active devices whose
excitation can be controlled to supply or absorb reactive power. It appears that all the existing
scheduling methods are sensitive to fuel-cost characteristics and select cheaper units
considering only real power demand but do not select the units considering the impact on bus
voltages. After scheduling the units the load is allocated among them by an optimal power
flow (OPF) which takes care of operating and network constraints. But low voltage problem
cannot be solved this way if the units near the problematic areas (even though their fuel cost
may be relatively higher) are not selected at the scheduling stage before the OPF.
In this research a new methodology for scheduling has been developed for considering bus
voltages. This ensures that the generation units which are able to improve the system voltage
profile will be selected. For this a new optimization function is formed augmenting the
classical Lagrange function for the total time period (i.e. 24 hours) by a bus voltage sensitive
function. Notably the classical Lagrange function for selection of units comprises only the
fuel cost and load balancing constraint. In the voltage sensitive function, each bus voltage
magnitude excepting that for the slack bus in each hour has been modeled in terms of (i) the
elements of a network matrix, (ii) a negative injected current contributed by the shunt
admittance including line charging susceptance and load (real and reactive) at each bus, and (iii) both real and reactive power outputs of the generation units to be evaluated for
scheduling. The network matrix is similar to bus impedance matrix but it is formed excluding
the slack bus and all shunt admittances and line charging susceptances. The real power (I2R)
loss in transmission lines has also been embedded in the new Lagrange function as a fraction
of the real power outputs of the units being evaluated for selection.
The proposed scheduling method has been extensively tested on the IEEE 30 bus standard
system under diverse forecasted loading scenarios for a period of 24 hours and various sets of
cost parameters for the generation units. The results are compared in each case by running
OPF separately using the units scheduled by respectively (i) the classical Lagrange method
and (ii) the proposed method. In general compared to the classical method the proposed
scheduling method has been able to so select the generation units that led to better OPF
results i.e. better overall performance in terms of convergence, transmission loss and number
of buses with voltage magnitudes significantly above the minimum value, at a marginal cost
addition.
The potentials of the proposed method (i.e. the voltage sensitive generation scheduling) in a
real life system have also been demonstrated by applying and comparing it against the
classical Lagrange method for 93-generator and 166-bus Bangladesh Power System (BPS).
Suggestions have also been made on how the proposed method can be used for
accommodating spinning reserve at the scheduling stage. The developed method is expected
to be useful also for the ISOs (Independent System Operators) in deciding transmission
network access to the generation units which have submitted on-line bids for a time period
comprising a number of hours together. |
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