Abstract

At present, electricity generation is responsible for more than a quarter of the greenhouse gas emissions in the US. Integrating significant amounts of renewable energy sources into a power grid is probably the most accessible way to reduce carbon emissions from power grids and slow down climate change. Unfortunately, the most accessible renewable power sources, such as wind and solar, are highly intermittent and thus bring a lot of uncertainty to power grid operation and challenge existing optimization and control policies. The chance-constrained (CC) alternating current optimal power flow (AC-OPF) framework finds the minimum cost of generation dispatch, maintaining the power grid operation within security limits with a prescribed probability. Unfortunately, the AC-OPF problem’s chance-constrained extension is non-convex, computationally challenging, and requires knowledge of system parameters and also needs additional assumptions to be made about the behavior of renewable generation probability distribution. Known linear and convex approximations to the above problems, though tractable, are too conservative for operational practice and do not consider uncertainty in system parameters. This paper presents an alternative data-driven approach for solving the stochastic AC-OPF problem, based on Gaussian process regression (GPR) to close this gap. The Gaussian process (GP) approach learns a simple yet non-convex data-driven approximation to the AC power flow equations that can incorporate uncertain inputs. The latter is then used to determine the solution of CC-OPF efficiently, by accounting for both input and parameter uncertainty. The practical efficiency of the proposed approach using different approximations for GP-uncertainty propagation is validated and illustrated using a number of standard IEEE test cases.

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