Full metadata
Title
Stability and Security of Distribution Networks with High-Penetration Renewables
Description
Rapid increases in the installed amounts of Distributed Energy Resources are forcing a paradigm shift to guarantee stability, security, and economics of power distribution systems. This dissertation explores these challenges and proposes solutions to enable higher penetrations of grid-edge devices. The thesis shows that integrating Graph Signal Processing with State Estimation formulation allows accurate estimation of voltage phasors for radial feeders under low-observability conditions using traditional measurements. Furthermore, the Optimal Power Flow formulation presented in this work can reduce the solution time of a bus injection-based convex relaxation formulation, as shown through numerical results. The enhanced real-time knowledge of the system state is leveraged to develop new approaches to cyber-security of a transactive energy market by introducing a blockchain-based Electron Volt Exchange framework that includes a distributed protocol for pricing and scheduling prosumers' production/consumption while keeping constraints and bids private. The distributed algorithm prevents power theft and false data injection by comparing prosumers' reported power exchanges to models of expected power exchanges using measurements from grid sensors to estimate system state. Necessary hardware security is described and integrated into underlying grid-edge devices to verify the provenance of messages to and from these devices. These preventive measures for securing energy transactions are accompanied by additional mitigation measures to maintain voltage stability in inverter-dominated networks by expressing local control actions through Lyapunov analysis to mitigate cyber-attack and generation intermittency effects. The proposed formulation is applicable as long as the Volt-Var and Volt-Watt curves of the inverters can be represented as Lipschitz constants. Simulation results demonstrate how smart inverters can mitigate voltage oscillations throughout the distribution network. Approaches are rigorously explored and validated using a combination of real distribution networks and synthetic test cases. Finally, to overcome the scarcity of real data to test distribution systems algorithms a framework is introduced to generate synthetic distribution feeders mapped to real geospatial topologies using available OpenStreetMap data. The methods illustrate how to create synthetic feeders across the entire ZIP Code, with minimal input data for any location. These stackable scientific findings conclude with a brief discussion of physical deployment opportunities to accelerate grid modernization efforts.
Date Created
2021
Contributors
- Saha, Shammya Shananda (Author)
- Johnson, Nathan (Thesis advisor)
- Scaglione, Anna (Thesis advisor)
- Arnold, Daniel (Committee member)
- Boscovic, Dragan (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
209 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.161802
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
Note
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2021
Field of study: Electrical Engineering
System Created
- 2021-11-16 04:09:22
System Modified
- 2021-11-30 12:51:28
- 2 years 11 months ago
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