Abstract

To ensure safe and stable operation, accurate fault localization within active distribution networks is required, and this has attracted much attention. Influenced by many factors such as the control strategy, control performance, initial state of the distributed generators, and distribution network topology, it is still difficult to reliably locate complex and variable single-phase short-circuit faults relying only on a single feature quantity, while localization methods incorporating intelligent algorithms are affected by the choice of a priori samples and the fact that the solution process is a black-box model. To address this challenge, in this work, an expression for the single-phase short-circuit current vector of a distribution network containing distributed generators is derived, and the differences in magnitude and phase angle of the short-circuit current vectors upstream and downstream of the fault point are analyzed. Based on measurement theory, a fault confidence distribution function that reacts to the relative size of the current magnitude difference and phase angle difference is established, and the fusion fault confidence of the short-circuit current vector is constructed with the help of evidence theory. Finally, a method of locating single-phase short-circuit faults in distribution networks that contain distributed generators is proposed. The simulation results show that the ratio of the fusion fault confidence of the short-circuit current vector between faulted and non-faulted sections under the influence of different distributed generator capacities, fault locations, and transition resistances differ significantly. The proposed single-phase short-circuit fault localization method is both adaptive and physically interpretable and has clear boundaries, sound sensitivity, and engineering practicability.

Full Text
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