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How to change the electric power output of machs in dynamic simulation?

asked 2017-07-25 05:11:49 -0600

Linzhi gravatar image

updated 2017-07-25 05:15:13 -0600

I've found the answer by @perolofl in https://psspy.org/psse-help-forum/que...

As said in it, the electric power is determined by the turbine power. As an example does @perolofl introduce the IEESGOV model, the reference of which is P0, the reference can be changed by applying the API increment-gref. However, other turbine models does not follow the same setting, if I use increment-gref, for some models the GREF is speed instead of P0.

Another option according to @perolofl is to count on Fortran code and a compiler, which I cannot manage.

I am trying to change the power output of generators step by step, to get close to the rotor angle stability limit. Is there any alternatives for me?

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answered 2017-07-26 13:19:31 -0600

jconto gravatar image

The simulation of incremental power transfers is done with multiple simulation runs. For an initial generators output (P1), a load flow is solved and prepared for a dynamic run, add dyr file, perform the dynamic run and test for the rotor angle stability limit. Increment the generator output to P2 (P2 = P1+ delta) and solved the load flow for a dynamic run, add dyr file , perform a second dynamic run and test for the rotor angle stability limit. Repeat this process as many times as needed until you reach the maximum output of the generators, the case does not converge or the simulation shows a stability limit or crashes. Delta is chosen accordingly so you iterate no more than 10 times (my preference). All these activities can be embedded in a python loop to automate the solution.

Changing generation output within a dynamic simulation (unless is part of a switching event) is not recommended because it creates a numerical instability within the integration process. Same logic applies to load. Once a simulation starts, the trajectory that the variables follows (power output, v, f, etc.) and outcomes like no-convergence (signaling reaching a limit) should be left to the natural models response.

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Thanks a lot. Your advice is instructive and easy to handle. I will keep it in mind to avoid changing generation within dynamic simulation, while some witching events like load shedding must happen in power system operation.

Linzhi gravatar imageLinzhi ( 2017-08-01 19:30:24 -0600 )edit

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Asked: 2017-07-25 05:11:49 -0600

Seen: 1,922 times

Last updated: Jul 26 '17