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Journal Article

Citation

Muthugala V, Wadduwage DP, Wijayapala A, Fernando R. J. Natl. Sci. Found. Sri Lanka 2021; 49(1): e3.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka)

DOI

10.4038/jnsfsr.v49i1.9866

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Power swings are translations of oscillations in generator rotors when the power system is subjected to severe disturbances. They can be categorised as stable swings, for which, the system itself can recover and unstable swings, where the system cannot recover itself but need some remedial action to gain stability. An unstable power swing condition or out-of-step (OOS) event cannot be tolerable for a prolonged period of time due to its negative impact on power system equipment and integrity. These oscillations might trigger protection relays, removing key transmission elements leading to widespread outages and even blackouts. Controlled islanding of the system is one of the solutions to isolate the systems operating asynchronously during OOS events. Therefore, identification of generator coherency would come in handy in the process of controlled islanding, where the generators with similar rotor dynamic characteristics swing together forming separate clusters in the transmission network. Also, it is important that the coherency identification become online-based, as coherent groups may differ in response to various events and operating conditions. This paper proposes a generalised methodology to identify coherent groups of generators as an online decision-making approach based on real-time data. The accuracy of the proposed methodology was demonstrated using Sri Lanka power system as a case study.


Language: en

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