A Simplified Approach to Controlled Islanding of Power System

Author(s):  
Naga Chaitanya Munukutla ◽  
Venkata Siva Krishna Rao Gadi ◽  
Ramamoorty Mylavarapu
Energies ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 3066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongbo Shao ◽  
Yubin Mao ◽  
Yongmin Liu ◽  
Wanxun Liu ◽  
Sipei Sun ◽  
...  

Controlled islanding has been proposed as a last resort action to stop blackouts from happening when all standard methods have failed. Successful controlled islanding has to deal with three important issues: when, and where to island, and the evaluation of the dynamic stability in each island after islanding. This paper provides a framework for preventing wide-area blackouts using wide area measurement systems (WAMS), which consists of three stages to execute a successful islanding strategy. Normally, power system collapses and blackouts occur shortly after a cascading outage stage. Using such circumstances, an adapted single machine equivalent (SIME) method was used online to determine transient stability before blackout was imminent, and was then employed to determine when to island based on transient instability. In addition, SIME was adopted to assess the dynamic stability in each island after islanding, and to confirm that the chosen candidate island cutsets were stable before controlled islanding was undertaken. To decide where to island, all possible islanding cutsets were provided using the power flow (PF) tracing method. SIME helped to find the best candidate islanding cutset with the minimal PF imbalance, which is also a transiently stable islanding strategy. In case no possible island cutset existed, corresponding corrective actions such as load shedding and critical generator tripping, were performed in each formed island. Finally, an IEEE 39-bus power system with 10 units was employed to test this framework for a three-stage controlled islanding strategy to prevent imminent blackouts.


Author(s):  
N. Z. Saharuddin ◽  
I. Zainal Abidin ◽  
H. Mokhlis ◽  
E. F. Shair

<p>Power system-controlled islanding is one of the mitigation techniques taken to prevent blackouts during severe outage. The implementation of controlled islanding will lead to the formation of few islands, that can operate as a stand-alone island. However, some of these islands may not be balanced in terms of generation and load after the islanding execution. Therefore, a good load shedding scheme is required to meet the power balance criterion so that it can operate as a balanced stand-alone island. Thus, this paper developed a load shedding scheme-based metaheuristics technique namely modified discrete evolutionary programming (MDEP) technique to determine the optimal amount of load to be shed in order to produce balanced stand-alone islands. The developed load shedding scheme is evaluated and validated with two other load shedding techniques which are conventional EP and exhaustive search techniques. The IEEE 30-bus and 39-bus test systems were utilized for this purpose. The results proves that the load shedding based MDEP technique produces the optimal amount of loads to be shed with shortest computational time as compared with the conventional EP and exhaustive search techniques.</p>


Energies ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Tang ◽  
Feng Li ◽  
Chenyi Zheng ◽  
Qi Wang ◽  
Yingjun Wu

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 309-331
Author(s):  
Assist. Prof. Dr. Inaam I. ALI ◽  
Mohanad Sh. Tarad AL-AASAM

Preliminary studies on Iraqi power system show a significant increase in the short circuit level at some of the grid substations and some power stations. This increasing results from the growth of the power generation and transmission systems in size and complexity. Islanding or splitting is dividing the power system into several islands inorder to reduce short circuit levels and avoiding blackouts. The main islanding problem is determining the location of proper splitting points and load balance and satisfaction of transmission capacity constraints for each islands.This paper mainly introduces new proposed splitting strategies of large-scale power systems by using (PSS™E version 30.3 PACKAGE PROGRAME), such that, make re-interconnection of 400KV super high voltage substation based on three-phase load flow to be minimum flow at splitting point and infeed fault current details method to control short circuit levels in Iraq power system without islanding the power system into isolated islands. Controlled islanding or splitting scheme is frequently considered as the final solution to avoid blackouts of power system.Simulation IEEE-25 bus and Iraqi power system used as the test systems for this method. Furthermore, simulation results show significant effectiveness on reducing short circuit levels with same time give stable splitting islands with same frequency for preventing the system blackouts.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (14) ◽  
pp. 3542-3549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Fernández-Porras ◽  
Mathaios Panteli ◽  
Jairo Quirós-Tortós

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (3.12) ◽  
pp. 945 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abul Khair ◽  
Mohd Rihan ◽  
Mohd Zuhaib

With increase in deregulations and renewable sources of generation, the power system network is leading towards more geographical spread and interconnectedness. This causes significant challenges requiring on-line monitoring and control. It also provides a path for disturbances to propagate causing cascading failure, even blackouts. Wide area detection of potential island formation and controlled separation is considered as an effective tool against a blackout under severe disturbances. In the present work one line remaining algorithm has been utilized for implementation of controlled islanding in a section of Indian power grid.  


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