Power System Analysis: Fundamentals of Power Systems (EEL 3216)
Power System Analysis: Fundamentals of Power Systems (EEL 3216)
Power System Analysis: Fundamentals of Power Systems (EEL 3216)
Power Systems I
Computer Analysis
Practical power systems
must be safe
reliable
economical
System Analysis
for system planning
for system operations
requires component modeling
types of analysis
transmission line performance
power flow analysis
economic generation
scheduling
fault and stability studies
Power Systems I
Chapter 2
AC Power
2π 2π
∫ cos(ω t ) dt = 0 ∫ sin (ω t ) dt = 0
0 0
P = V I cosθ
P
pf = cosθ =
V I
Power Systems I
Apparent Power
P = V I cosθ
S=V I
Power Systems I
Reactive Power
p X (t ) = V I sin θ sin 2(ωt + θ v ) = S sin θ sin 2(ωt + θ v )
Q ≡ S sin θ = V I sin θ
p X (t ) = Q sin 2(ωt + θ v )
for a pure resistor
the impedance angle is zero, power factor is unity
apparent power and real power are equal
for a purely inductive circuit
the current lags the voltage by 90°, average power is zero
no transformation of energy
for a purely capacitive circuit
the current leads the voltage by 90°, average power is zero
Power Systems I
AC Power
Example
the supply voltage is given by v(t) = 480 cos t
the load is inductive with impedance Z = 1.20∠60°
determine the expression for the instantaneous current i(t) and
instantaneous power p(t)
plot v(t), i(t), p(t), pR(t), pX(t) over an interval of 0 to 2
π
Power Systems I
Complex Power
Real Power, P
RMS based - thermally equivalent to DC power
Reactive Power, Q
Oscillating power into and out of the load because of its reactive
element (L or C).
Positive value for inductive load (lagging pf)
Complex Power, S
V I * = V I ∠(θ v − θ i ) = V I ∠θ = S
S = V I cosθ + j V I sin θ = P + jQ
S = P2 + Q2
Power Systems I
Complex Power
V
θv S
I
θ Q
θi θ
Leading Power Factor
P
I
Lagging Power Factor θi V
θ
θv P
θ
Q
S
Power Systems I
The Complex Power Balance
From the conservation of energy
Real power supplied by the source is equal to the sum of the real
powers absorbed by the load and the real losses in the system
Reactive power must also be balanced
The balance is between the sum of leading and the sum of lagging
reactive power producing elements
The total complex power delivered to the loads in parallel is the
sum of the complex powers delivered to each
0 = ∑ Pgen − ∑ Ploads − ∑ Plosses
0 = ∑ Qleading + ∑ Qcaps − ∑ Qlagging − ∑ Qind
0 = ∑ S gen − ∑ Sloads − ∑ Slosses
Power Systems I
Complex Power
Example
in the circuit below, find the power absorbed by each load and
the total complex power
find the capacitance of the capacitor to be connected across the
loads to improve the overall power factor to 0.9 lagging
V I1 I2 I3
1200 V
Z1=60+j0 Z2=6+j12 Z3=30-j30
Power Systems I
Complex Power Flow
Z = R+j X =|Z|∠γ
Consider the following circuit
P12 =
V1 V2
sin (δ 1 − δ 2 ) Q12 =
V1
[V 1 − V2 cos(δ 1 − δ 2 ) ]
X X
Power Systems I
Complex Power Flow
For a typical power system with small R / X ratio, the
follow observations are made
Small changes in δ1 or δ2 will have significant effect on the real
power flow
Small changes in voltage magnitude will not have appreciable
effect on the real power flow
Assuming no resistance, the theoretical
maximum power (static transmission V1 V2
capacity) occurs when the angular Pmax =
difference, δ, is 90° and is given by: X
For maintaining stability, the power system operates with small
load angle δ
The reactive power flow is determined by the magnitude
difference of the terminal voltages
Power Systems I
Three-Phase Power
Balanced three-phase power
Assumes balanced loads
Assumes voltage and currents with phases that have 120°
separation
Power Systems I
Chapter 3
Power Systems I
Generator Models
Generator may be modeled in three different ways
Power Injection Model - the real, P, and reactive, Q, power of the
generator is specified at the node that the generator is connected
either the voltage or injected current is specified at the connected
node, allowing the other quantity to be determined
Thevenin Model - induced AC voltage, E, behind the synchronous
reactance, Xd
E Xd Node
R1 X1 N1 : N2 R2 X2
E1 E2
V1 Rc Xm V2
Power Systems I
Transformer Model
Approximate circuit referred to the primary
REQ1 XEQ1
N1
V1 Rc Xm V2′ = V2
N2
Power Systems I
Load Models
Models are selected based on both the type of analysis
and the load characteristics
Constant impedance, Zload
Load is made up of R, L, and C elements connected to a network
node and the ground (or neutral point of the system)
Constant current, Iload
The load has a constant current magnitude I, and a constant
power factor, independent of the nodal voltage
Also considered as a current injection into the network
Constant power, Sload
The load has a constant real, P, and reactive, Q, power
component independent of nodal voltage or current injection
Also considered as a negative power injection into the network
Power Systems I
Per Unit System
Almost all power system analyses are performed in per-
units x ( engr. unit ) x%
x per unit ( pu ) = engineering ( actual )
=
xbase ( engr. unit ) 100
Per unit system for power systems
Based on a per-phase, wye-connect, three-phase system
3-phase power base, S3φ
common power base is 100 MVA
Line-to-line voltage base, VLL S3φ −base
voltage base is usually selected I L−base =
from the equipment rated voltage 3 VLL−base
(VLL−base ) (VLN −base )
Phase current base, IL 2 2
Phase impedance base, Z Z base = =
S3φ −base S1φ −base
Power Systems I
Per Unit System
Equipment impedances are frequently given in per units
or percentages of the impedance base
The impedance base for equipment is derived from the rated
power and the rated voltage
When modeling equipment in a system, the per unit impedance
must be converted so that the equipment and the system are on
a common base
old new
ZΩ Sbase ZΩ Sbase
Z old = old = Z Ω old 2 new
Z pu = new = Z Ω new 2
pu
Z base (Vbase ) Z base (Vbase )
Z new
=
S new
base
⋅
(
V )
old 2
base
⋅Z old
=Z old S new
base
V
⋅
old
base
2
pu
(V )
new 2
base
S old
base
pu pu
S old
base V
new
base
new
Sbase
It is normal for the voltage bases to be the same: Z
new
pu =Z old
pu old
Sbase
Power Systems I
Per Unit System
The advantages of the per unit system for analysis
Gives a clear idea of relative magnitudes of various quantities
The per-unit impedance of equipment of the same general type
based upon their own ratings fall in a narrow range regardless of
the rating of equipment.
Whereas their impedances in ohms vary greatly with the ratings.
The per-unit impedance, voltages, and currents of transformers
are the same regardless of whether they are referred to the
primary or the secondary side.
Different voltage levels disappear across the entire system.
The system reduces to a system of simple impedances
The circuit laws are valid in per-unit systems, and the power and
voltages equations are simplified since the factors of √3 and 3
are eliminated in the per-unit system
Power Systems I
Per Unit System
Example
the one-line diagram of a three-phase power system is shown
use a common base of 100 MVA and 22 kV at the generator
draw an impedance diagram with all impedances marked in per-unit
the manufacturer’s data for each apparatus is given as follows
G: 90 MVA 22 kV 18% G
T1: 50 MVA 22/220 kV 10%
L1: 48.4 ohms
T2: 40 MVA 220/11 kV 6% T1 T3
T3: 40 MVA 22/110 kV 6.4%
L2: 65.43 ohms L1 L2
T4: 40 MVA 110/11 kV 8%
M: 66.5 MVA 10.45 kV 18.5% T2 T4
Ld: 57 MVA 10.45 kV 0.6 pf lag
Power Systems I M Ld