Abstract

Background: Power system anomaly detection is of great significance for realizing system situation awareness and early detection of system operating risks. In view of the complex operating conditions of the system, there are a large number of opaque links in the mechanism, and the anomaly detection approach based on physical mechanism modeling is prone to system errors due to assumptions, simplification, and transfer in the modeling process. This paper focuses on digital twin based data-driven approaches for power system anomaly detection to compensate for the limitation of physical methods in dynamical modeling. Methods: First of all, a digital twin framework for power system real-time analysis is constructed based on the concept of digital twin. Then, this paper conducts researches on the core of the designed framework, i.e., digital twin modeling. Considering the complexity of power system operating conditions, data-driven modeling is preferred and a random matrix and free probability theory based model for anomaly detection of system operating situation is constructed. Results: Simulation data with different spatiotemporal structure generated through a Monte Carlo experiment verified the sensitivity of the constructed model for data correlations. Meanwhile, the case on the system operating data generated through the IEEE 118-bus system validate the effectiveness of the proposed model for the system anomaly detection. Conclusions: The constructed data-driven model can accurately characterize the correlations among data elements, has good sensitivity to the variation of data spatial and temporal correlations, and can depict the data residuals better than the M-P law curve, which indicates the practicability and necessity of the constructed data-driven model for the digital twin modeling of power system anomaly detection.

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