Publication

Functional-Basis Analysis of Non-Stationary Signals in Modern Power Grids: Theory and Implementation in Embedded Systems

Abstract

Situational awareness strategies are essential for the reliable and secure operation of the electric power grid which represents critical infrastructure in modern society. With the rise of converter-interfaced renewable generation and the consequent shift towards low-inertia networks, power grids are likely to experience more frequent and severe grid dynamics, necessitating advanced grid monitoring technologies coupled with refurbished protection and control strategies. In response to this challenge, Phasor Measurement Units (PMUs) have become crucial for measurement, control, and protection schemes in power grids, offering accurate, localized, and time-synchronized snapshots of the grid with rapid refresh rates. However, PMUs are based on the stationary, narrowband phasor model which is inherently unsuitable for the analysis of severe signal dynamics and can result in misleading synchrophasor estimations and inappropriate control actions. Within this context, this thesis explores three distinct strategies for the detection and compression of broadband signal dynamics. The first method involves projection of the signal's broadband discrete Fourier spectrum onto parameterized dictionaries to distinguish and identify common signal dynamics. This method yields high-accuracy estimates for long observation windows. However, its effectiveness is limited by the frequency resolution of the discrete spectrum, and its performance decreases for shorter observation windows. Building off of this work, a hybrid time- and frequency-domain method is proposed, leveraging properties of Hilbert transform-derived analytic signals to improve parameter estimation for shorter window lengths. The technique is capable of identifying interfering tones and windows with multiple steps. However, the computational requirements of the method scale rapidly when expanding the parameter ranges or model complexity. For deployment into embedded systems for real-time applications, a third and computationally efficient strategy is proposed which relies on time-domain fitting analysis of the analytic signal components. The technique employs a flexible model, easily accommodates larger parameter ranges, requires only a small set of dictionary elements, and is shown to provide excellent parameter estimations for very short observation windows. A major outcome of the thesis involves the development of a Measurement Unit prototype. Considering the strengths and weaknesses of the proposed methods, the time-domain algorithm is selected and further optimized for deployment onto a dedicated embedded systems device. Efficient, high-performance Hilbert filters are also developed and implemented to estimate the analytic signal. Factors associated with embedded systems, such as latency restrictions, finite memory capacity, and fixed-point precision arithmetic, are taken into account during the deployment process. Finally, the developed prototype is characterized using a PMU calibrator to comprehensively evaluate the algorithm's performance in dynamic conditions, including those specified by and extending beyond the IEC/IEEE 60255/118 Standard requirements. The results of these tests, when compared to standard phasor-based methods, demonstrate the developed tool's potential to detect transients, identify underlying frequency variations, and provide concise, meaningful models for the compression of complex signal dynamics in power systems.

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Related concepts (39)
Smart grid
A smart grid is an electrical grid which includes a variety of operation and energy measures including: Advanced metering infrastructure (of which smart meters are a generic name for any utility side device even if it is more capable e.g. a fiber optic router) Smart distribution boards and circuit breakers integrated with home control and demand response (behind the meter from a utility perspective) Load control switches and smart appliances, often financed by efficiency gains on municipal programs (e.g.
Electrical grid
An electrical grid is an interconnected network for electricity delivery from producers to consumers. Electrical grids vary in size and can cover whole countries or continents. It consists of: power stations: often located near energy and away from heavily populated areas electrical substations to step voltage up or down electric power transmission to carry power long distances electric power distribution to individual customers, where voltage is stepped down again to the required service voltage(s).
Analytic signal
In mathematics and signal processing, an analytic signal is a complex-valued function that has no negative frequency components. The real and imaginary parts of an analytic signal are real-valued functions related to each other by the Hilbert transform. The analytic representation of a real-valued function is an analytic signal, comprising the original function and its Hilbert transform. This representation facilitates many mathematical manipulations.
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