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Power Systems -  Daniel S. Kirschen

Power Systems (eBook)

Fundamental Concepts and the Transition to Sustainability
eBook Download: EPUB
2024 | 1. Auflage
336 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-394-19952-5 (ISBN)
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Power Systems

Fresh perspective on power systems, dealing with uncertainty, power electronics, and electricity markets

Power Systems is a highly accessible textbook on a subject that helps students understand how power systems work and the fundamental constraints that guide its operation and design. In a rapidly developing field, this unique approach equips readers to understand why things might be done in a certain way to help develop new solutions to modern problems.

To aid in reader comprehension, the text contains examples that reinforce the understanding of the fundamental concepts, informative and attractive illustrations, and problems of increasing levels of difficulty.

An accompanying website includes a complete solution manual, teaching slides, and open-source simulation tools and a variety of examples, exercises, and projects of various levels of difficulty.

Written by a leading figure in the power system community with a strong track record of writing for the student reader, Power Systems covers some important classical topics, such as the modeling of components, power flow, fault calculations, and stability. In addition, it includes:

  • A detailed discussion of the demand for electricity and how it affects the operation of power systems.
  • An overview of the various forms of conventional and renewable energy conversion.
  • A primer on modern power electronic power conversion.
  • A careful analysis of the technical and economic issues involved in load generation balancing.
  • An introduction to electricity markets.

With its up-to-date, accessible, and highly comprehensive coverage, Power Systems is an ideal textbook for various courses on power systems, such as Power Systems Design and Operation, Introduction to Electric Power Systems, Power System Analysis, and Power System Operation and Economics.

Daniel S. Kirschen is the Donald W. and Ruth Mary Close Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Washington, USA. Prior to joining the University of Washington, he taught for 16 years at The University of Manchester, UK. Before becoming an academic, he worked for Control Data and Siemens on the development of application software for utility control centers. He is a Fellow of the IEEE


Fresh perspective on power systems, dealing with uncertainty, power electronics, and electricity markets Power Systems is a highly accessible textbook on a subject that helps students understand how power systems work and the fundamental constraints that guide its operation and design. In a rapidly developing field, this unique approach equips readers to understand why things might be done in a certain way to help develop new solutions to modern problems. To aid in reader comprehension, the text contains examples that reinforce the understanding of the fundamental concepts, informative and attractive illustrations, and problems of increasing levels of difficulty. An accompanying website includes a complete solution manual, teaching slides, and open-source simulation tools and a variety of examples, exercises, and projects of various levels of difficulty. Written by a leading figure in the power system community with a strong track record of writing for the student reader, Power Systems covers some important classical topics, such as the modeling of components, power flow, fault calculations, and stability. In addition, it includes: A detailed discussion of the demand for electricity and how it affects the operation of power systems. An overview of the various forms of conventional and renewable energy conversion. A primer on modern power electronic power conversion. A careful analysis of the technical and economic issues involved in load generation balancing. An introduction to electricity markets. With its up-to-date, accessible, and highly comprehensive coverage, Power Systems is an ideal textbook for various courses on power systems, such as Power Systems Design and Operation, Introduction to Electric Power Systems, Power System Analysis, and Power System Operation and Economics.

1
Introduction


1.1 What is a Power System?


Electricity provides a clean, efficient, versatile, and economical way to deliver energy. Efficient generators have been designed to convert other forms of energy into electrical energy. Transmission lines carry large amounts of energy over long distances. Electric motors are efficient and make possible precise motion control. Electricity is also the only way to power electronic devices. However, there is one drawback to using electricity as an energy vector: storing significant amounts of energy in electrical form is not practical. Delivering significant amounts of electrical energy must therefore take place as a continuous process. The rate at which electrical energy flows (i.e., power) is the fundamental concept. Generating electric power from primary energy sources, transmitting it over long distances, and converting it into another form of power for a variety of end uses on an uninterrupted basis requires a set of devices working in a coordinated fashion. This is what we call a power system.

Power systems come in a wide range of sizes. The interconnections of Europe and North America connect thousands of generators to millions of consumers over vast meshed networks. At the other end of the scale, the smallest power system consists of a single generator converting energy from a primary source to power a single, local load. In this book, we will use examples from small systems to explain concepts, and we will also explain the techniques that engineers use to analyze and operate the largest power systems.

1.2 What are the Attributes of a Good Power System?


Three main objectives guide the planning, design, and operation of power systems:

Reliability: Because many aspects of modern life have become dependent on the availability of electric power, any interruption in its supply causes major damage or at least a significant nuisance. We expect the lights to come on when we flip the switch and sensitive industrial processes to complete without disruption, even as the system is exposed to random fluctuations or when some components fail.

Sustainability: Like any other large-scale human activity, power systems have an impact on our environment, through the use of finite resources and the emission of greenhouse gases and other pollutants. To achieve sustainability, we must aim to generate 100% of our electrical energy from renewable sources.

Economy: Access to a cheap supply of electricity fosters economic growth and makes it possible for households to redirect their limited financial resources to other purposes.

Clearly, these objectives conflict. For example, improving reliability typically costs money; the cheapest sources of energy are not always sustainable; increasing the proportion of energy from renewable sources creates reliability issues. Finding solutions that optimally balance these objectives is the fundamental aim of power system engineering.

1.3 Structure of a Power System


1.3.1 Physical Structure


Except for the smallest applications, power systems connect multiple generators to multiple loads because this networked structure supports the desirable attributes described in the previous section. Supplying electric power from multiple generators increases reliability because when one of them fails, the other can compensate for this loss and, most of the time, ensure that no consumer is left without power. Connecting many energy sources to many loads also improves the overall economy of the system in two ways. First, as we will see in Chapter 2, aggregating loads reduces the amount of generation capacity that must be built to keep consumers supplied at all times. Second, this aggregated load varies substantially over the course of a day or a year. When this load is low, we can supply it from the most cost-effective generators in the system and use the more expensive ones only when they are needed. Finally, aggregating generation from renewable sources such as wind and solar over a wide area supports the sustainability goal. The production of these generators is driven by wind speed and cloud cover, factors that are uncontrollable but vary from location to location. Leveraging this diversity in output levels the overall renewable generation, which makes it easier to predict and match to the overall demand for electric power.

Most power systems operate with ac rather than dc because ac voltages can be easily or lowered using transformers. This ability to operate different parts of the system at different voltages reduces losses. To illustrate this fact, consider the simple circuit shown in Figure 1.1 and suppose that we want to supply a given resistive load P at a voltage V through a line of resistance R. The relation between the power supplied to the load, the current, and the load voltage is:

(1.1)

Figure 1.1 Simple circuit illustrating the effect of the supply voltage on the losses.

Table 1.1 Relative series losses for various standard operating voltages.

Voltage Relative losses
110 V 1
220 V 0.25
13 kV 71.6 × 10−6
132 kV 694.4 × 10−9
345 kV 101.7 × 10−9

The losses in the line are given by:

(1.2)

Combining these two equations, we get:

(1.3)

The losses in the line are thus inversely proportional to the square of the operating voltage. Table 1.1 illustrates this effect for a few standard voltages used in power systems. Note that operating at very high voltages not only reduces losses but is also essential to maintaining the stability of the system. We will discuss this issue in Chapter 11.

Obviously, safety and practical considerations make it impossible to use very high voltages everywhere. To prevent accidents and accidental short circuits, conductors must be separated from each other and from ground by a distance or an amount of expensive insulating material that increases with the nominal operating voltage. While building tall towers in the countryside to support high-voltage transmission lines is feasible and economically justifiable, this is impossible in and around urban areas. Different parts of large power systems therefore operate at different nominal voltages, as illustrated in Figure 1.2. Design considerations typically limit the output voltage of large generators to less than 30 kV. This voltage is immediately stepped up to a voltage suitable for transmission over long distances. As the amount of power and the distance over which it must be transmitted increase, so does the most appropriate standardized nominal voltage. This voltage is gradually stepped down to meet the needs of various classes of consumers. According to the U.S. Energy Information Agency, on average only about 5% of the electricity generated in the United States is dissipated as losses in the transmission and distribution networks. Most of these losses occur in the low-voltage distribution networks.

Figure 1.2 Typical operating voltages in large power systems.

Source: United States Department of Energy, Blackout 2003, “Final Report on the August 14, 2003, Blackout in the United States and Canada: Causes and Recommendations”.

Very large consumers (for example steel processing plants or refineries) receive power directly at transmission voltage level and operate their own industrial power system. Smaller industrial, commercial, and residential consumers are connected at the lower voltage appropriate to their needs. The higher-voltage components constitute the transmission network, while the lower-voltage parts form the distribution network. An intermediate portion is sometimes described as the subtransmission network. Local conventions rather than universally agreed voltage thresholds define the demarcation between distribution, subtransmission, and transmission.

Transmission networks are generally meshed to further the triple objective of reliability, economy, and sustainability. Meshes indeed provide redundant paths for the flow of power from generators to loads. These redundant paths reduce the likelihood that this flow would be interrupted by the disconnection of a line. They also increase the transmission capacity, which is the maximum amount of power that cheap and renewable sources can securely provide over the network. With the exception of some densely populated urban areas, distribution networks are typically radial because protecting against the consequences of faults is easier and cheaper in a radial network than in a meshed network. However, radial networks do not provide the same level of reliability as meshed networks because the disconnection of a single component can disconnect consumers from all sources of power. This is considered acceptable in distribution networks because each occurrence of such a problem affects only a relatively small number of consumers.

Figure 1.2 reflects the operation of traditional power systems where power produced by a relatively small number of large, centrally controlled generators flows through the transmission network and down the radial distribution network...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 8.3.2024
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Technik Elektrotechnik / Energietechnik
ISBN-10 1-394-19952-X / 139419952X
ISBN-13 978-1-394-19952-5 / 9781394199525
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