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The Concept of Topology Control Using Line Switching

The Concept of Topology Control Using Line Switching. Shmuel Oren Earl J. Isaac Professor University of California at Berkeley. Overview. Overview of RATC Topology Control’s Impact on the Feasible Set of Dispatch Solutions Industry Practices of Topology Control RATC Solutions

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The Concept of Topology Control Using Line Switching

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  1. The Concept of Topology Control Using Line Switching ShmuelOren Earl J. Isaac Professor University of California at Berkeley

  2. Overview • Overview of RATC • Topology Control’s Impact on the Feasible Set of Dispatch Solutions • Industry Practices of Topology Control • RATC Solutions • Topology Control and Reliability • Previous Topology Control Research: Economic Savings

  3. Section 1: Overview of RATC

  4. National Directives • Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Order 890 • Improve the economic operations of the electric transmission grid • Energy Policy Act of 2005 • Sec.1223.a.5 of the US Energy Policy Act of 2005 • “encourage… deployment of advanced transmission technologies” • “optimized transmission line configuration” • Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 • Title 13, Smart Grid: • “increased use of … controls technology to improve reliability, stability, and efficiency of the grid” • “dynamic optimization of grid operations and resources”

  5. Motivation for Topology Control • Control of transmission not fully utilized today • Transmission assets are treated as static in the short term • Currently operators change transmission assets’ states on ad-hoc basis • Special Protection Schemes (SPSs) • Network redundancies • Required for reliability • Each redundancy not required for every operational state • Redundancies may cause dispatch inefficiency • Harness the flexibility of transmission assets for power flow control • Improvements in reliability • Co-optimize with generation to reduce costs • Loss minimization • Congestion management

  6. Literature Review Corrective switching • [Mazi, Wollenberg, Hesse 1986]: Corrective control of power systems flows • [Schnyder, Glavitsch 1990]: Security enhancement using an optimal switching power flow • [Shao, Vittal 2006]: Corrective switching algorithm for relieving overloads and voltage violations Switching to reduce losses • [Fliscounakis, Zaoui, et al. 2007]: Topology influence on loss reduction as a mixed integer linear program Switching to relieve congestion • [Granelli, Montagna, et al. 2006]: Optimal network reconfiguration for congestion management by deterministic and genetic algorithms Switching to ensure stability • [Perunicic, Ilic, Stankovic1988]: Short time stabilization of power systems vial line switching

  7. Section 2: Topology Control’s Impact on the Feasible Set of Dispatch Solutions

  8. Topology Control and the Feasible Set of Dispatch Solutions • Solution space for optimal power flow • Original feasible set: {0, 1, 2, 3} • Original optimal cost: $20,000(A=180MW,B=30MW,C=40MW) at {2} Original Feasible Set Gen B Optimal Solution 120MW 1 80MW 50MW 30MW 2 Gen A 3 0 180MW 150MW 200MW

  9. Topology Control and the Feasible Set of Dispatch Solutions • Feasible set with line A-B offline: {0, 4, 5, 6} • With topology control: feasible set: {0, 1, 7, 5, 6} • Non-convex set – causes difficulty to solve topology control problems • Open Line A-B, optimal cost: $15,000 (A=200MW, B=50MW) at {8} Gen B Feasible Set with Line A-1 Offline Optimal Solution with Topology Control 120MW 1 80MW 4 7 5 50MW 8 30MW 2 Gen A 3 0 6 180MW 150MW 200MW

  10. Section 3: Industry Practices of Topology Control

  11. Special Protection Schemes (Remedial Action Schemes) • PJM (2010) Manual 3: Transmission Operations. http://www.pjm.com/markets-and-operations/compliance/nerc-standards/~/media/documents/manuals/m03.ashx • Sunnyside-Torrey 138 kV Operating Guide (AEP Operating Memo T029) • Historically, the Sunnyside-Torrey 138 kV overloads on the outage of the South Canton – Torrey 138 kV line. Opening the S.E. Canton 138 kV CB at Sunnyside will help to reduce the post-contingency flow on the Sunnyside-Torrey 138 kV line. • Page 107

  12. Special Protection Schemes (Remedial Action Schemes) • PJM (2010) Manual 3 • The 138 kV tieline L28201 from Zion to Lakeview (WEC) can be opened to relieve contingency overloads for the loss of either of the following two lines: • Zion Station 22 to Pleasant Prairie (WEC) 345 kV Red (L2221) • Zion Station 22 to Arcadian (WEC) 345 kV Blue (L2222) • Page 172 • 107_Dixon ‗L15621‘ 138 kV CB Operation (ComEd SPOG 3-21) • The L15621 138 kV circuit breaker at Dixon may be opened to reduce post-contingency loadings on the Nelson – Dixon (15508) 138 kV line for the loss of the Nelson – Dixon (15507) 138 kV line if the contingency occurs. • Page 173

  13. Superstorm Sandy - PJM • PJM lost 82 bulk electric facilities • 6 500kV facilities; 3 345kV facilities; 39 230kV facilities; 25 138kV facilities • Caused extremely high voltage on the system during low load levels • “We were dealing with extremely high voltage on the system but a switching plan was developed to help alleviate these conditions.” • Via Andy Ott, VP of PJM: several 500kV lines were switched out to mitigate over voltage concerns during these low load level periods

  14. Topology Control for Congestion Management • California ISO, Minimum Effective Threshold Report. [Online]. Page 4. Available: http://www.caiso.com/274c/274ce77df630.pdf. • Event causedsubstantial congestion in 115kV network in Sacramento Valley • “These constraints resulted from outages in the higher voltage transmission system running north-to-south through the Sacramento Valley; the ISO had multiple days around this time when this 115 kV transmission system had significant congestion costs due to the north-to-south flows, until the ISO was able to later identify a remedy of transmission circuit switching to relieve this congestion.” • Took 2 weeks to determine this switching solution

  15. Manage Congestion in Germany to Mitigate Wind Intermittency • F. Kuntz, “Congestion management in Germany – the impact of renewable generation on congestion management costs,” Available: http://idei.fr/doc/conf/eem/papers_2011/kunz.pdf. • Use of transmission switching to mitigate line overloads caused by intermittent resources

  16. Current Industry Practices • While there are current industry practices of topology control there is yet a systematic framework to optimize the network topology • Not a part of day-ahead operations • Not a part of hour-ahead operations • No real-time corrective switching optimization

  17. Section 4: RATC Solutions

  18. New Challenges and Opportunities • Challenge: Renewables, N-m Events and Malicious Attacks • New opportunities: • Advances in computational capabilities (hardware and software) • Aid the transition from preventive to corrective control

  19. New Challenges: Renewables • Renewables (wind and solar): • Variable & uncertain – frequently changing flow patterns • Require additional conventional generators to be committed in order to provide reserves • Complications: • Renewables are frequently remotely located • Congestion • Renewables not only require more reserves but require additional locational reserves

  20. Current Solutions to Manage Renewables • Dispatch more conventional, fossil-fuel based generation • Drawbacks: • Generators operate at inefficient levels • Generators are required to provide fast ramping services • Additional investment in generation to provide locational reserves • Emissions per MWh increase due to operating at inefficient levels and fast ramping • Defeats the economic and environmental benefits of renewables! • Increase demand response programs • Difficult to ensure consumers curtail load when needed • Percent of continued participation in these programs is not high

  21. The RATC Solution • Current approaches utilize two types of assets: • Generation and Demand • Current approaches neglect the utilization of the transmission grid • Topology control has primarily been out of reach due to computational complexity • Robust Adaptive Topology Control enables: • Modeling of transmission assets (lines and transformers) as a controllable asset • Topology control: • Re-directs flow of electric power by temporarily reconfiguring the topology • Use of circuit breakers – low hardware cost solution • Improves deliverability of reserves

  22. New Challenges: N-m Contingencies & Malicious Attacks • Cascading outages and malicious attacks: • Extreme social welfare losses due to lost load The RATC Solution: • Topology detection procedure – determines lines out of service without faults • Fast re-closure algorithm to minimize load shedding and bring the system back to steady-state

  23. New Challenges: Paradigm Shift from Preventive to Corrective • Primary method to ensure N-1 reliable operations is preventive approach The RATC Solution: • Fast algorithms to implement corrective switching • Enables topology control to be used to respond to N-1 events • Improves reliability and reduces operational costs

  24. Section 5: Topology Control and Reliability

  25. Topology Control and Reliability

  26. Generator Info • Operational costs, startup costs, shutdown costs, min & max operating levels, ramp rates • N-1 is enforced • System must have adequate 10 minute spinning reserve online to respond to any contingency (line or generator)

  27. Optimal Solutions & Impact on Reliability • Optimal N-1 compliant solution with static topology: • Solution cannot handle loss of generators 3 and 4 • Optimal N-1 compliant solution with smart switching (line A-C open) • Solution can handle loss of generators 3 and 4

  28. Section 6: Previous Topology Control Research: Economic Savings

  29. Co-optimize Topology with Generation

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