Abstract

This paper presents an efficient geometric parameterization technique for the continuation power flow. It was developed from the observation of the geometrical behavior of load flow solutions. The parameterization technique eliminates the singularity of load flow Jacobian matrix and therefore all the consequent problems of ill‐conditioning. This is obtained by adding equations lines passing through the points in the plane determined by the loading factor and the total real power losses that is rewritten as a function of the real power generated by the slack bus. An automatic step size control is also provided, which is used when it is necessary. Thus, the resulting method enables the complete tracing of P‐V curves and the computation of maximum loading point of any electric power systems. Intending to reduce the CPU time, the effectiveness caused by updating the Jacobian matrix is investigated only when the system undergoes a significant change. Moreover, the tangent and trivial predictors are compared with each other. The robustness and simplicity as well as the simple interpretation of the proposed technique are the highlights of this method. The results obtained for the IEEE 300‐bus system and for real large systems show the effectiveness of the proposed method.

Highlights

  • The power flow problem PF consists of an algebraic analysis of power system under steadystate operating conditions

  • This paper presents an efficient geometric parameterization technique for the continuation power flow

  • The reactive power limits Q in PV ’s buses are the same used in the conventional PF

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Summary

Introduction

The power flow problem PF consists of an algebraic analysis of power system under steadystate operating conditions. In this analysis, the electric power system is represented by a set of nonlinear algebraic equations that are used for computing the operating points of the electrical power system for various loading conditions. When the PF equations have no solution for a given loading condition, it is concluded that the generation and network are not physically able to meet the demand required. In this situation, modifications are necessary in the generation dispatch and/or in the electrical network topology

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