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February 19, 2010

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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WEAKLINKS PROFESSIONALTM AT A GLANCE

 

In the context of electricity market operations, a primary concern is the ability to transfer power across vast interconnected networks while meeting a broad range of operating reliability constraints. A common scenario consists of compensating load increases and/or generation outages in a system area by raising the generation elsewhere.  In order to ensure that the grid does not get too close to its stability limits, it is therefore important to evaluate the maximum transfer capability across the "links" that interconnect the areas involved in such transactions.

A "link" identifies a group of transmission lines that form a topological cut-set, i.e., their removal splits the networkin two areas, one on each side of the link. The maximum power that can be transferred across a link is limited by thermal and stability constraints. In a sense, the concept of "stability constrained link" is similar to the concept of “congestion path”, with the difference that the former is concerned with stability, rather than thermal, violations.

"Stability constrained links" may appear in any multi-area power system where large MW blocks are transferred between weakly interconnected areas. This is often the case in longitudinal transmission networks that span distinct system areas with significant load-generation unbalances.

The analysis of recent blackouts due to instability revealed that most of them followed a similar pattern:

  • Large MW blocks get transferred from areas with inexpensively priced energy toward areas where the load demand has increased due to an actual increase in load, or perhaps because one or several local generating units are scheduled for maintenance, or simply because the local generation is too expensive

  • As a result, certain links get loaded closer and closer to their stability limits

  • At this moment, a generation or transmission outage takes place. Typically, such incidents evolve into cascading outages

  • Since the link was already operating within a small stability margin, the physical phenomena leading to blackout are triggered and the wide-spread disturbance becomes unavoidable.

The detection of critical links is an intrinsically difficult proposition. To begin with, the search of all the possible links entails a graph topological procedure that may find hundreds of thousands of links even for moderately sized networks. Once the full set of links has been determined, a stability criterion is used to compute the maximum transfer capability of each link. Then, the links are ranked in the order of their stability margins.

This complex problem is solved quite expeditiously by WeakLinks Finder™[1], which is the computational engine of WeakLinks Professional™[2]. Given a solved load-flow case or a state estimate, the program:

  • Detects all the "links", or “cut-sets”, within the transmission system

  • Ranks them in the order of their distance to the maximum transfer limit between the areas situated on each side of the link

  • Recommends a control strategy, i.e., raise or lower the MW output of certain machines, which can help increase the stability margin of the link.

The same array of calculations is performed on user-defined links. The solution's speed enables the fast evaluation of the power transfers between areas known a priori to have stability limitations -- as often as needed, for each transaction, off-line and in real-time.

These capabilities form a useful complement to QuickStab® Professional, which is being used off-line and in real-time in control centers in the United States, Europe, Latin America and Asia. WeakLinks Finder™ identifies the stability constrained links. This information is then passed to QuickStab®, whose multi-area stability computational engine quickly determines how far from instability are the areas separated by the link.

Together, these fast and versatile applications stand out because they quickly detect and quantify the risk of instability -- and allow utilities and system operators to develop preventative and corrective strategies that can save hundreds of millions of dollars in penalties and lost revenues caused by blackouts.

For additional information or to schedule a live demonstration please contact us via e-mail infoquickstab@eciqs.com, web http://www.eciqs.com, telephone (212) 913-9154 or in writing to Energy Consulting International, Inc., 405 Lexington Avenue, 26th Floor, Chrysler Bldg, New York, NY 10174.

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[1]  WeakLinks Finder™ is a trademark of Dr. Ing. Marius Pomarleanu

[2]  WeakLinks Professional™ is a trademark of Energy Consulting International, Inc.

 

 

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