Abstract

Major blackouts may have critical societal consequences and are very challenging to analyse and mitigate. Part of the challenge lies in the complex sequences of events that characterize such blackouts and that involve a diverse set of mechanisms propagating the events. The analysis is also challenged by the great uncertainties associated with individual mechanisms and thus with the overall likelihood of sequences of event. This article proposes a general framework which uses a graph to describe the causal relationship between consequences, system states, initiating events and barriers. A concrete implementation of the framework is presented by implementing exemplary models for three transition mechanisms, namely i) protection system failures, ii) failure of corrective actions, and iii) failure of islanding. In the implementation, a graph is automatically generated where edges are associated with these transition mechanisms. A vulnerability analysis methodology based on the modelling framework is proposed that allows for identifying how critical consequences might occur as well as estimating their likelihoods of occurring. The vulnerability analysis methodology moreover incorporates a possibilistic uncertainty analysis to explicitly capture uncertainties associated with the likelihood of events. Finally, a case study considering a small but realistic test system is used to illustrate the approach and demonstrate its main advantages: i) The vulnerability analysis can identify critical sequences of events and barriers to mitigate them, ii) the graph-based representation allows for exploring the sequences of events and understanding the vulnerabilities, iii) the modelling framework is general and can incorporate multiple transition mechanisms, and iv) the analysis accounts for the large uncertainty associated with the critical sequences of events.

Highlights

  • Major blackouts occur relatively infrequently but may have critical societal consequences when they do [1,2,3,4]

  • To describe such sequences of events, we propose a modelling framework based on concepts from graph theory, and we use this framework to analyse power system vulnerability

  • In this article we have presented a vulnerability analysis metho­ dology based on a general modelling framework for describing se­ quences of events leading to power supply interruptions

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Summary

Introduction

Major blackouts occur relatively infrequently but may have critical societal consequences when they do [1,2,3,4]. The second group is characterized by often having a single initiating failure event, followed by complex sequences of causally related events, eventually leading to wide-area power interruptions and large societal consequences [1,5,6]. These sequences of events are sometimes referred to as cascading events, cascading outages or cascading blackouts. This article focuses on this second group of major blackouts and emphasizes the view of such a blackout as a sequence of causally related events To describe such sequences of events, we propose a modelling framework based on concepts from graph theory, and we use this framework to analyse power system vulnerability. The main objectives of a vulnerability analysis within the pro­ posed framework is to identify critical sequences of events, and to identify vulnerabilities and in turn effective barriers against such events

Related work
Contributions and outline
General modelling framework and vulnerability analysis methodology
Graph-based framework for sequences of events
Vulnerability analysis methodology
Uncertainty analysis
Exemplary implementation of the modelling framework
Prior outages
Protection and control system failures
Failure of islanding
Case study
Software implementation
Test system and case set-up
Results
Conclusions and further work
Full Text
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