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Maximising Branch Power Flows as a Descriptive Structural Metric for Electrical Networks
Author(s)
Date Issued
2022-06
Date Available
2024-04-22T16:09:55Z
Abstract
This paper describes an optimization-based procedure that identifies the maximum power flow that each branch in an electrical network could be exposed to. The procedure uses a linear optimal power flow formulation that determines the flow-maximising generator dispatch and loading conditions for each branch in turn. This theoretical upper bound on the power flow that a branch could be exposed to is termed its loadability. The paper proposes this loadability as a descriptive structural metric that helps reveal the fundamental origin of congestion in power system. For instance, it is insightful to compare a branch's loadability with its as-built thermal capacity, to identify those branches that are most congestion-prone, or alternatively, those lines which can never exploit their full available capacity. In the six test systems studied, it is found that there is wide variation in the loadability of the various branches, where some would be loaded well beyond their thermal limits by particular generating schedules, whereas other branches can never operate beyond even a fraction of their thermal capabilities. Low branch reactance is found to be a key driver of high loadability in power systems, and this suggests new appraoches to alleviating transmission system congestion.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
IEEE
Journal
IEEE Systems Journal
Volume
16
Issue
2
Start Page
2460
End Page
2470
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1932-8184
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Authors submitted manuscript Maximising Branch Power Flows as a Descriptive Structural Metric for Electrical Networks.pdf
Size
3.62 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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67209135c4599bb707e5145cf0b1ee94
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