Byzantine Fault Tolerant Monitoring and Control for Electric Power Grid

Author(s):  
Wenbing Zhao

Author(s):  
Wenbing Zhao

In this chapter, we present the justification and a feasibility study of applying the Byzantine fault tolerance (BFT) technology to electric power grid health monitoring. We propose a set of BFT mechanisms needed to handle the PMU data reporting and control commands issuing to the IEDs. We report an empirical study to assess the feasibility of using the BFT technology for reliable and secure electric power grid health monitoring and control. We show that under the LAN environment, the overhead and jitter introduced by the BFT mechanisms are negligible, and consequently, Byzantine fault tolerance could readily be used to improve the security and reliability of electric power grid monitoring and control while meeting the stringent real-time communication requirement for SCADA operations.


Author(s):  
Wenbing Zhao

In this chapter, the authors present the justification and a feasibility study of applying the Byzantine fault tolerance (BFT) technology to electric power grid health monitoring. They propose a set of BFT mechanisms needed to handle the PMU data reporting and control commands issuing to the IEDs. They report an empirical study to assess the feasibility of using the BFT technology for reliable and secure electric power grid health monitoring and control. The authors show that under the LAN environment, the overhead and jitter introduced by the BFT mechanisms are negligible, and consequently, Byzantine fault tolerance could readily be used to improve the security and reliability of electric power grid monitoring and control while meeting the stringent real-time communication requirement for SCADA operations.


Power management has been one of the focused areas of research from the past few decades. Power blackout is the main problem nowadays and it occurs mainly due to outdated infrastructure used for electricity in industries. In a traditional grid, the consumer load information is obtained manually which is a time-consuming and expensive process. In this paper, a prototype is developed for the real-time off-site data monitoring and control of the consumer loads in the distribution network of the power grid. The designed prototype avoids the tripping of loads by the use of load sharing.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 3112
Author(s):  
Donghyeon Lee ◽  
Seungwan Son ◽  
Insu Kim

Widespread interest in environmental issues is growing. Many studies have examined the effect of distributed generation (DG) from renewable energy resources on the electric power grid. For example, various studies efficiently connect growing DG to the current electric power grid. Accordingly, the objective of this study is to present an algorithm that determines DG location and capacity. For this purpose, this study combines particle swarm optimization (PSO) and the Volt/Var control (VVC) of DG while regulating the voltage magnitude within the allowable variation (e.g., ±5%). For practical optimization, the PSO algorithm is enhanced by applying load profile data (e.g., 24-h data). The objective function (OF) in the proposed PSO method considers voltage variations, line losses, and economic aspects of deploying large-capacity DG (e.g., installation costs) to transmission networks. The case studies validate the proposed method (i.e., optimal allocation of DG with the capability of VVC with PSO) by applying the proposed OF to the PSO that finds the optimal DG capacity and location in various scenarios (e.g., the IEEE 14- and 30-bus test feeders). This study then uses VVC to compare the voltage profile, loss, and installation cost improved by DG to a grid without DG.


Author(s):  
Hans Peter Kraemer ◽  
Anne Bauer ◽  
Michael Frank ◽  
Peter Van Hasselt ◽  
Peter Kummeth ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Soo-Hoan Lee ◽  
Kang-Wan Lee ◽  
Yong-Beum Yoon ◽  
Ok-Bae Hyun

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