October 17, 2011
Conference Paper

The Influence of Topology Changes on Inter-area Oscillation Modes and Mode Shapes

Abstract

The topology of a power grid network is a piece of critical information for power grid operations. Different power grid topologies can change grid characteristics, inter-area oscillation modes, mode shapes, and even the robustness of the power system. This paper presents some preliminary study results, based on an approved WECC operating case and a modified low damping WECC system, to show the impact of topology changes resulting from N-1 contingencies on power system modes and mode shapes. The results show that topology changes can have very different impact on modal properties in a power system: some result in unstable situation, while others can improve small signal stability. For the former, the studies show about 4.5% damping reduction, so 5% damping margin would be required to ensure the system can sustain the contingencies. For the latter, those topology changes could be used as a control method to improve small signal stability. Mode shapes normally do not change when there is an N-1 topology change. These observations suggest that the inclusion of topological information is useful for improving the accuracy and effectiveness of power system control schemes.

Revised: October 24, 2011 | Published: October 17, 2011

Citation

Chen Y., J.C. Fuller, R. Diao, N. Zhou, Z. Huang, and F.K. Tuffner. 2011. The Influence of Topology Changes on Inter-area Oscillation Modes and Mode Shapes. In 2011 IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting, July 24-29, 2011, Detroit, Michigan. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE. PNNL-SA-77205. doi:10.1109/PES.2011.6039904