An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue

Continuation power flow (CPF) calculation is very important for analyzing voltage stability of power system. CPF calculation needs to deal with non-smooth constraints such as the generator buses reactive power limits. It is still a technical challenge to determine the step size while dealing with ab...

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Main Authors: Yan Huang, Yuntao Ju, Zeping Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/18/3493
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spelling doaj-ff84a0760f7e41cc9f645b09f54dbd942020-11-25T02:01:24ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732019-09-011218349310.3390/en12183493en12183493An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth IssueYan Huang0Yuntao Ju1Zeping Zhu2College of Information and Electrical Engineering, China Agricultural University, Haidian District, Beijing 100083, ChinaCollege of Information and Electrical Engineering, China Agricultural University, Haidian District, Beijing 100083, ChinaCollege of Information and Electrical Engineering, China Agricultural University, Haidian District, Beijing 100083, ChinaContinuation power flow (CPF) calculation is very important for analyzing voltage stability of power system. CPF calculation needs to deal with non-smooth constraints such as the generator buses reactive power limits. It is still a technical challenge to determine the step size while dealing with above non-smooth constraints in CPF calculation. In this paper, an asymptotic numerical method (ANM) based on Fischer‐Burmeister (FB) function, is proposed to calculate CPF. We first used complementarity constraints to cope with non-smooth issues and introduced the FB function to formulate the complementarity constraints. Meanwhile, we introduced new variables for substitution to meet the quadratic function requirements of ANM. Compared with the conventional predictor-corrector method combining with heuristic PV-PQ (PV and PQ are used to describe bus types. PV means that the active power and voltage of the bus are known. PQ means that the active and reactive power of bus are known.) bus type switching, ANM can effectively solve the PV-PQ bus type switching problem in CPF calculation. Furthermore, to assure high efficiency, ANM can rapidly approach the voltage collapse point by self-adaptive step size adjustment and constant Jacobian matrix used for power series expansion. However, conventional CPF needs proper step set in advance and calculates Jacobian matrix for each iteration. Numerical tests on a nine-bus network and a 182-bus network validate that the proposed method is more robust than existing methods.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/18/3493continuation power flownon-smooth constraintsasymptotic numerical methodcomplementarity constraintsFisher–Burmeister functionpredictor-corrector method
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yan Huang
Yuntao Ju
Zeping Zhu
spellingShingle Yan Huang
Yuntao Ju
Zeping Zhu
An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
Energies
continuation power flow
non-smooth constraints
asymptotic numerical method
complementarity constraints
Fisher–Burmeister function
predictor-corrector method
author_facet Yan Huang
Yuntao Ju
Zeping Zhu
author_sort Yan Huang
title An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
title_short An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
title_full An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
title_fullStr An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
title_full_unstemmed An Asymptotic Numerical Continuation Power Flow to Cope with Non-Smooth Issue
title_sort asymptotic numerical continuation power flow to cope with non-smooth issue
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Continuation power flow (CPF) calculation is very important for analyzing voltage stability of power system. CPF calculation needs to deal with non-smooth constraints such as the generator buses reactive power limits. It is still a technical challenge to determine the step size while dealing with above non-smooth constraints in CPF calculation. In this paper, an asymptotic numerical method (ANM) based on Fischer‐Burmeister (FB) function, is proposed to calculate CPF. We first used complementarity constraints to cope with non-smooth issues and introduced the FB function to formulate the complementarity constraints. Meanwhile, we introduced new variables for substitution to meet the quadratic function requirements of ANM. Compared with the conventional predictor-corrector method combining with heuristic PV-PQ (PV and PQ are used to describe bus types. PV means that the active power and voltage of the bus are known. PQ means that the active and reactive power of bus are known.) bus type switching, ANM can effectively solve the PV-PQ bus type switching problem in CPF calculation. Furthermore, to assure high efficiency, ANM can rapidly approach the voltage collapse point by self-adaptive step size adjustment and constant Jacobian matrix used for power series expansion. However, conventional CPF needs proper step set in advance and calculates Jacobian matrix for each iteration. Numerical tests on a nine-bus network and a 182-bus network validate that the proposed method is more robust than existing methods.
topic continuation power flow
non-smooth constraints
asymptotic numerical method
complementarity constraints
Fisher–Burmeister function
predictor-corrector method
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/18/3493
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