论文标题
低惯性电力系统的在线安全评估:澳大利亚西南互连系统的实时频率稳定性工具
Online Security Assessment of Low-Inertia Power Systems: A Real-Time Frequency Stability Tool for the Australian South-West Interconnected System
论文作者
论文摘要
在低旋转惯性和可再生能源高渗透的中小型隔离电力网络中,生成/负载应急事件可能会导致频率较高的偏移,可能导致级联故障甚至停电。因此,对于系统操作员,能够实时监视网络状态并始终预测最大可能的频率偏差至关重要。 本文介绍了由澳大利亚能源市场运营商(AEMO)开发的实时频率稳定性(RTFS)工具,并在西南西南互连系统(SWIS)的控制室中进行操作,以确保可用的旋转储备足够快,足以阻止任何条件下的任何条件,尤其是低启发式。为了减少不同涡轮机构模型的计算负担和复杂性,每个发电机都使用了一个简单的一阶滞后函数,具有两个可调节变量。这些可调节的参数以及其他关键模型参数(例如负载阻尼和惯性)已使用历史事件的高速故障记录器数据对实际频率响应进行了校准。正如在几个案例研究中所证明的那样,实时工具已被证明是准确的,可以预测可靠的意外事件后系统频率的轨迹,因此表明可以在其他地方进行类似的实现,而全球范围内的动力系统则朝着较低的惯性进行。
In small/medium-sized isolated power networks with low rotational inertia and high penetration of renewables, generation/load contingency events may cause large frequency excursions, potentially leading to cascading failures and even blackouts. Therefore, it is crucial for system operators to be able to monitor the state of the network in real-time and predict the maximum possible frequency deviations at all times. This paper presents a real-time frequency stability (RTFS) tool developed by the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) and operationalized in the control room for the South West Interconnected System (SWIS) to ensure that the available spinning reserve is sufficient and fast enough to arrest frequency excursions under any conditions, and particularly low-inertia ones. To reduce the computational burden and complexity of the different turbine-governor models, a simple first-order lag function with two adjustable variables has been used for each of the generator. These adjustable parameters, along with other key model parameters such as load damping and inertia, have been calibrated against actual frequency response using high-speed fault recorder data from historical events. As demonstrated in several case studies, the real-time tool has proven to be accurate at predicting the trajectory of system frequency after credible contingencies, thus suggesting that similar implementations could be carried out elsewhere while power systems worldwide progress towards lower inertia.