Abstract

A static VAR compensator (SVC) is a critical component for reactive power compensation in electric arc furnaces (EAFs) that is used to relieve the flicker impacts and maintain the voltage level. A weak voltage profile can not only reduce the power-quality services, but can also result in system instability in severe cases. The cybersecurity of EAFs is becoming a significant concern due to their cyber-physical structure. The reliance of SVC controllers on reactive power measurement and network communications has resulted in a cyber-vulnerability point for unauthorized access to the EAF, which can affect its normal operation. This paper addresses concerns about cyber attacks on EAFs, which can cause network communication issues in measurement data for SVCs. Three significant and different types of cyber attacks that are launched on SVC controllers—a replay attack, delay attack, and false data injection attack (FDIA)—were simulated and investigated. In order to stop the activities of cyber attacks, a secured anomaly detection model (ADM) based on a prediction interval is proposed. The proposed model is dependent on a support vector regression and a new smooth cost function for constructing the optimal and symmetrical intervals. A modified algorithm based on teaching–learning-based optimization was developed to adapt the ADM’s parameters during training. The simulation’s outcomes on a genuine dataset showed the strong capability of the proposed model against cyber attacks in EAFs.

Highlights

  • There are four static VAR compensator (SVC) located in the electric arc furnaces (EAFs) on the 12.66 kV side of the transformer

  • To secure the reactive power compensation carried out by the SVC in the face of cyber attacks, a confidence level of 90% is considered, making sure that any prediction interval with a lower prediction interval confidence level (PICL) is omitted from the set

  • This paper proposed a secure and reliable anomaly detection model (ADM) based on prediction intervals to construct estimation bounds around the reactive power demands of the EAF

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Summary

Introduction

An electric arc furnace (EAF) is a metallurgical furnace for melting and converting scrap steel into new steel by using a high current level. The high reactive power demand in an EAF affects the neighboring loads’ power quality by reducing the voltage level and injecting harmonics in the range of 0.5–0.25 Hz [2]. Such a high reactive power demand can cause severe challenges if it is not properly compensated [3]

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