Abstract

Given the critical role played by natural gas in providing electricity, heat, and other essential services, better models are needed to understand the dynamics of natural gas networks during extreme events. This paper aims at establishing appropriate and fast simulation models to capture the slow dynamics of linepack depletion for ideal isothermal natural gas pipeline networks. Instead of solving partial differential equations (PDE) on a large scale, three alternative implicit ordinary differential equation (ODE) simulation techniques are derived and discussed. The first one is commonly used in the literature with a slack node assumption. We show that the system of equations associated with this model is degenerate when flux injections are controlled (i.e. specified) at all nodes. To recover regularity under such a condition, two novel implicit ODE models are proposed with different techniques on boundary conditions. They are easy to derive and efficient to simulate by standard ODE solvers. More importantly, they present useful frameworks for analyzing how networks respond to system-wide mass flux imbalances. These techniques offer different alternatives for simulating system dynamics based on how sources and loads are chosen to be modeled, and they are all proven to be regular (non-degenerate) in tree-structured networks. These proposed techniques are all tested on the 20-node Belgium network. The simulation results show that the conventional model with the slack node assumption cannot effectively capture linepack depletion under long term system-wide mass flux imbalance, while the proposed models can characterize the network behavior until the linepack is completely depleted.

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