A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment

Recent changes in the economical, political, and environmental aspects of the power system industry have driven utilities to operate the grid under an increasing number of stressful conditions. Deregulation policies have caused the transmission system and especially the interties to be used in a man...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Henry, Shawn, 1977- (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4111
id ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_182303
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1823032020-06-13T03:07:02Z A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment Henry, Shawn, 1977- (authoraut) Baldwin, Thomas L. (professor directing dissertation) Clark, Jonathan (university representative) Edrington, Chris (committee member) Li, Helen (committee member) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf Recent changes in the economical, political, and environmental aspects of the power system industry have driven utilities to operate the grid under an increasing number of stressful conditions. Deregulation policies have caused the transmission system and especially the interties to be used in a manner other than it was originally designed. Regulatory uncertainty at both the state and federal level has impeded transmission investment and prevented necessary system coordination on a regional scale. Environmental activism has exacerbated this situation by creating a public reluctance to permit and build new generation stations and transmission lines. Utilities have responded to this new environment by operating under reduced safety margins in order to sustain profitability without increasing rates. This operating environment has made the power system vulnerable to voltage collapse related blackouts and wide area disturbances. This research explores the use of an inverse-time under-voltage load shedding scheme for voltage collapse prevention. In particular, issues associated with configuring relays in predominantly inductive loaded systems and voltage-regulated environments are explored. For the highly inductive system, a methodology is developed to determine relay parameters that take into account local and global voltage problems. A voltage slope control method and a sensitivity index is developed to address situations where local distributed resources provide reactive power compensation at sufficient levels to create the potential for instability to occur at close to nominal voltage. The IEEE 30 Bus test power system and several smaller test systems are used to investigate these concepts. A Thesis submitted to the Department of Electrical Engineering in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Summer Semester, 2010. April 23, 2010. Voltage Collapse, Voltage Stability, Load Shedding, Undervoltage Relaying Includes bibliographical references. Thomas L. Baldwin, Professor Directing Dissertation; Jonathan Clark, University Representative; Chris Edrington, Committee Member; Helen Li, Committee Member. Electrical engineering Computer engineering FSU_migr_etd-4111 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4111 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A182303/datastream/TN/view/Local%20Voltage%20Collapse%20Detection%20Method%20for%20Reliable%20Inverse-Time%20Undervoltage%20Relaying%20in%20a%20Distributed%20Resource%20Environment.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
Computer engineering
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Computer engineering
A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
description Recent changes in the economical, political, and environmental aspects of the power system industry have driven utilities to operate the grid under an increasing number of stressful conditions. Deregulation policies have caused the transmission system and especially the interties to be used in a manner other than it was originally designed. Regulatory uncertainty at both the state and federal level has impeded transmission investment and prevented necessary system coordination on a regional scale. Environmental activism has exacerbated this situation by creating a public reluctance to permit and build new generation stations and transmission lines. Utilities have responded to this new environment by operating under reduced safety margins in order to sustain profitability without increasing rates. This operating environment has made the power system vulnerable to voltage collapse related blackouts and wide area disturbances. This research explores the use of an inverse-time under-voltage load shedding scheme for voltage collapse prevention. In particular, issues associated with configuring relays in predominantly inductive loaded systems and voltage-regulated environments are explored. For the highly inductive system, a methodology is developed to determine relay parameters that take into account local and global voltage problems. A voltage slope control method and a sensitivity index is developed to address situations where local distributed resources provide reactive power compensation at sufficient levels to create the potential for instability to occur at close to nominal voltage. The IEEE 30 Bus test power system and several smaller test systems are used to investigate these concepts. === A Thesis submitted to the Department of Electrical Engineering in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Summer Semester, 2010. === April 23, 2010. === Voltage Collapse, Voltage Stability, Load Shedding, Undervoltage Relaying === Includes bibliographical references. === Thomas L. Baldwin, Professor Directing Dissertation; Jonathan Clark, University Representative; Chris Edrington, Committee Member; Helen Li, Committee Member.
author2 Henry, Shawn, 1977- (authoraut)
author_facet Henry, Shawn, 1977- (authoraut)
title A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
title_short A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
title_full A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
title_fullStr A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
title_full_unstemmed A Local Voltage Collapse Detection Method for Reliable Inverse-Time Undervoltage Relaying in a Distributed Resource Environment
title_sort local voltage collapse detection method for reliable inverse-time undervoltage relaying in a distributed resource environment
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4111
_version_ 1719319258876346368