Abstract

The exponential growth of unpredictable renewable power production sources in the power grid results in difficult-to-regulate reactive power. The ultimate goal of optimal reactive power dispatch (ORPD) is to find the optimal voltage level of all the generators, the transformer tap ratio, and the MVAR injection of shunt VAR compensators (SVC). More realistically, the ORPD problem is a nonlinear multi-objective optimization problem. Therefore, in this paper, the multi-objective ORPD problem is formulated and solved considering the simultaneous minimization of the active power loss, voltage deviation, emission, and the operating cost of renewable and thermal generators. Usually, renewable power generators such as wind and solar are uncertain; therefore, Weibull and lognormal probability distribution functions are considered to model wind and solar power, respectively. Due to the unavailability and uncertainty of wind and solar power, appropriate PDFs have been used to generate 1000 scenarios with the help of Monte Carlo simulation techniques. Practically, it is not possible to solve the problem considering all the scenarios. Therefore, the scenario reduction technique based on the distance metric is applied to select the 24 representative scenarios to reduce the size of the problem. Moreover, the efficient non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm II-based bidirectional co-evolutionary algorithm (BiCo), along with the constraint domination principle, is adopted to solve the multi-objective ORPD problem. Furthermore, a modified IEEE standard 30-bus system is employed to show the performance and superiority of the proposed algorithm. Simulation results indicate that the proposed algorithm finds uniformly distributed and near-global final non-dominated solutions compared to the recently available state-of-the-art multi-objective algorithms in the literature.

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