Post-disturbance transient stability assessment of power systems towards optimal accuracy-speed tradeoff

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Abstract

The recent development of phasor measurement technique opens the way for real-time post-disturbance transient stability assessment (TSA). Following a disturbance, since the transient instability can occur very fast, there is an urgent need for fast TSA with sufficient accuracy. This paper first identifies the tradeoff relationship between the accuracy and speed in post-disturbance TSA, and then proposes an optimal self-adaptive TSA method to optimally balance such tradeoff. It uses ensemble learning and credible decision-making rule to progressively predict the post-disturbance transient stability status, and models a multi-objective optimization problem to search for the optimal balance between TSA accuracy and speed. With such optimally balanced TSA performance, the TSA decision can be made as fast as possible while maintaining an acceptable level of accuracy. The proposed method is tested on New England 10-machine 39-bus system, and the simulation results verify its high efficacy.

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APA

Ren, C., Xu, Y., & Zhang, Y. (2018). Post-disturbance transient stability assessment of power systems towards optimal accuracy-speed tradeoff. Protection and Control of Modern Power Systems, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41601-018-0091-3

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