An efficient fault diagnostic approach for active distribution networks considering adaptive detection thresholds

Author(s):  
Gustavo G. Santos ◽  
Thiago S. Menezes ◽  
Pedro Henrique A. Barra ◽  
José Carlos M. Vieira
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Keyan Liu ◽  
Weijie Dong ◽  
Huanyu Dong ◽  
Jia Wei ◽  
Shiwu Xiao

After renewable energy distributed generator (DG) is connected to the power grid, traditional diverse-electric-information-based fault diagnosis approaches are not suitable for an active distributed network (ADN) due to the weak characteristics of fault current. Thus, this paper proposes a comprehensive nonformula fault diagnostic approach of ADN using only voltage as input. In the preprocess, sequential forward selection (SFS) and sequential backward selection (SBS) are utilized to optimize the input feature matrix of the sample in order to reduce the information redundancy of multiple measuring points in ADN. Then, a single “1-a-1” support vector machine (SVM) classifier is used for fault identification, and a multi-SVM, with radial basis function (RBF) as the kernel function, is applied to identify the location and fault type. To prove the proposed method is adaptable for ADN, two direct drive fans are used as a DG to test the IEEE 33 node model at every 10% of the line under three operating conditions that include all cases of distributed power generation in ADN. Results comparing real-time and historical data show that the proposed multi-SVM model reaches an average fault type diagnosis accuracy of 97.27%, with a fault identification accuracy of 96%. A backpropagation neural network is then compared to the proposed model. The results show the superior performance of the SBS-SFS optimized multi-SVM. This model can be usefully applied to the fault diagnosis of new energy sources with distributed power access to distribution networks.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Chowdhury ◽  
S. P. Chowdhury ◽  
P. Crossley

Author(s):  
Rajarshi Dutta ◽  
Saikat Chakrabarti ◽  
Ankush Sharma

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