Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance

Three-phase imbalance causes uneven voltage drops along low-voltage feeders. Under long-term load growth, the phase with the lowest terminal voltage will trigger network reinforcements, which are earlier than if the three phases were balanced. This leads to a higher voltage-driven reinforcement cost...

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Main Authors: Kang Ma, Chenghong Gu, Furong Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2016-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7448387/
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spelling doaj-c3c2bf0830ce4529889e20010476980a2021-03-29T19:39:15ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362016-01-0141345135410.1109/ACCESS.2016.25513697448387Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase ImbalanceKang Ma0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0606-9469Chenghong Gu1Furong Li2 University of Bath, Bath, U.K. University of Bath, Bath, U.K. University of Bath, Bath, U.K.Three-phase imbalance causes uneven voltage drops along low-voltage feeders. Under long-term load growth, the phase with the lowest terminal voltage will trigger network reinforcements, which are earlier than if the three phases were balanced. This leads to a higher voltage-driven reinforcement cost (VRC) than the balanced case. Three-phase power flow analyses are not suitable for VRC estimations under serious data deficiency (without customers' phase connectivity and smart metering data), and are not scalable due to the iterative nature, which brings a prohibitively high computation burden on a utility level with millions of feeders. To overcome the challenges, this paper proposes a novel scalable methodology for VRC estimations that is applicable from an individual feeder to millions of feeders, where the level of information is insufficient to support accurate three-phase power flow studies. The key is to use five types of load current distributions to represent customers' phase allocations and individual demands, and to incorporate these distributions into an equivalent impedance matrix, which allows a straightforward VRC estimation without iterations. This paper applies this methodology to an individual feeder, showing that: 1) the VRC decreases (increases) with the increase of the K (beta) factor of the trapezoid (triangular-rectangular) distribution, given that other conditions remain the same; 2) the VRC is more sensitive to voltage imbalance than to current imbalance; and 3) if the three phases are balanced, the change of any single variable results in an increase of the VRC, given that all other input variables remain constant.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7448387/power distributionpower system economicsthree-phase electric powerlow voltage networknetwork investmentnetwork investment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kang Ma
Chenghong Gu
Furong Li
spellingShingle Kang Ma
Chenghong Gu
Furong Li
Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
IEEE Access
power distribution
power system economics
three-phase electric power
low voltage network
network investment
network investment
author_facet Kang Ma
Chenghong Gu
Furong Li
author_sort Kang Ma
title Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
title_short Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
title_full Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
title_fullStr Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of Voltage-Driven Reinforcement Cost for LV Feeders Under 3-Phase Imbalance
title_sort estimation of voltage-driven reinforcement cost for lv feeders under 3-phase imbalance
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Three-phase imbalance causes uneven voltage drops along low-voltage feeders. Under long-term load growth, the phase with the lowest terminal voltage will trigger network reinforcements, which are earlier than if the three phases were balanced. This leads to a higher voltage-driven reinforcement cost (VRC) than the balanced case. Three-phase power flow analyses are not suitable for VRC estimations under serious data deficiency (without customers' phase connectivity and smart metering data), and are not scalable due to the iterative nature, which brings a prohibitively high computation burden on a utility level with millions of feeders. To overcome the challenges, this paper proposes a novel scalable methodology for VRC estimations that is applicable from an individual feeder to millions of feeders, where the level of information is insufficient to support accurate three-phase power flow studies. The key is to use five types of load current distributions to represent customers' phase allocations and individual demands, and to incorporate these distributions into an equivalent impedance matrix, which allows a straightforward VRC estimation without iterations. This paper applies this methodology to an individual feeder, showing that: 1) the VRC decreases (increases) with the increase of the K (beta) factor of the trapezoid (triangular-rectangular) distribution, given that other conditions remain the same; 2) the VRC is more sensitive to voltage imbalance than to current imbalance; and 3) if the three phases are balanced, the change of any single variable results in an increase of the VRC, given that all other input variables remain constant.
topic power distribution
power system economics
three-phase electric power
low voltage network
network investment
network investment
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7448387/
work_keys_str_mv AT kangma estimationofvoltagedrivenreinforcementcostforlvfeedersunder3phaseimbalance
AT chenghonggu estimationofvoltagedrivenreinforcementcostforlvfeedersunder3phaseimbalance
AT furongli estimationofvoltagedrivenreinforcementcostforlvfeedersunder3phaseimbalance
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