Abstract

With the rise in carbon emissions, it has become fashionable to construct a new power system using new energy as the primary raw material for power generation. This, however, might result in a significant rise in the number of system states and frequent changes in the system state. These issues raise the bar for the effectiveness of system dependability evaluation. Traditional evaluation procedures necessitate computing Optimal Power Flow (OPF) for many systems states one by one, which is unquestionably time-consuming. For that purpose, this research proposes a reliability evaluation approach based on two-dimensional convolutional networks. Branch circuit fault messages are analyzed with generator fault messages. Multiple channel state data from power system node admittance matrices, power generation, and energy demand are fed into a two-dimensional convolutional neural network. This is used to determine the regression connection between load curtailments and system status data and to forecast load curtailments. Finally, it is applied to the RTS-79 system, and experimental results demonstrate that the technique has certain advantages in terms of computing speed and accuracy.

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