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A distributed simulation based approach for detailed and decentralized power system transient stability analysis
Affiliation:1. Dept. of EECS, The University of Tennessee, 1520 Middle Dr., Knoxville, TN 37996, USA;2. SEAS, Harvard University, 33 Oxford St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA;3. GEIRINA,5451 Great America Parkway, Suite 125, Santa Clara, CA 95054, USA;1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Tehran (UT), Iran;2. Department of Energy Technology, Aalborg University (AAU), Denmark;1. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Electromagnetic Engineering and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST), Wuhan 430074, PR China;2. College of Electrical Engineering and New Energy, Three Gorges University, Yichang 443002, PR China;3. China Electric Power Research Institute, Beijing 100192, PR China;4. State Power Economic Research Institute, Beijing 100761, PR China;1. Department of EEE, Sri Sai Ram College of Engineering, Bangalore, India;2. Department of EEE, Dr.NGP Institute of Technology, Coimbatore, India
Abstract:This paper presents a distributed computing approach for piecewise transient stability (T/S) analysis of large-scale electrical networks using Diakoptics and large change sensitivity (LCS) concepts. Detailed T/S analysis in a secure and federative manner based on geographically decomposition using local computational resources is the greatest benefit realized by this method of analysis. In this way, with the minimum communications between subnetworks the same results as the conventional untorn T/S analysis can be achieved. Since the bottleneck in distributed computation is low speed network communication, a new latency exploitation technique is introduced for numerically solving system differential equations. The technique uses different step size in each subnetwork to decrease the number of numerical operations and data communications for a given total simulation time. The proposed distributed T/S method is implemented successfully across computer networks and its performance is studied using a 14 bus IEEE test system and some various large-scale networks up to 3000 buses. The presented results are compared with those obtained from conventional untorn T/S simulation.
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