Full metadata
Title
Estimating realistic hybrid-synthetic linear power flow transmission models
Description
Power flow models of the bulk electric transmission system are widely used to reveal insights on system behavior. These insights are useful not only for grid planning but increasingly for looking at complex interactions between different infrastructures. However, many existing models are either inaccessible to researchers or lack geospatial significance due to the use of entirely synthetic data. The objective of this work is to develop a geospatially relevant linear power flow model of the bulk electric transmission system - first for a sample region and then generalized for the United States. The power flow model incorporates real data where it is available and fills in data gaps with synthetic network generation methods from literature. This approach produces geospatially representative models which are statistically similar to synthetic models, and which provide realistic insight as to the behavior of the underlying infrastructure. This is particularly useful in understanding infrastructure behavior that may be tied to the electric power system. It can also provide a simplified yet realistic framework for transmission planning and interconnection, a well-known bottleneck for many energy projects throughout the United States. The resultant model creates a foundation for study of the electric power transmission system where geospatial relevance is important and reactive power planning can be neglected.
Date Created
2025-07
Contributors
- Sparks, Ryan M. (Author)
- Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author)
- Johnson, Nathan (Author)
- Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering (Issuing body)
- Arizona State University (Sponsor)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
16 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
Yes
Issuance
single unit
Place of Publication (Text)
Arizona
Place of Publication (Code)
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.202291
Copyright Date
2025-07
Preferred Citation
Ryan Sparks, Mikhail Chester, and Nathan Johnson, Estimating Realistic Hybrid-Synthetic Linear Power Flow Transmission Models, 2025, Arizona State University Metis Center Report No. ASU-METIS-25-TRS-002.
Statement of Responsibility
Ryan Sparks, Mikhail Chester, Nathan Johnson
Cataloging Standards
Note
At head of title: "Technical report"
numbering
"ASU-METIS-25-TRS-002"
date
"July 2025"
System Created
- 2025-08-05 05:05:04
System Modified
- 2026-05-18 06:02:31
- 2 weeks 3 days ago
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