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Power systems are transforming into more complex and stressed systems each day. These stressed conditions could lead to a slow decline in the power grid's voltage profile and sometimes lead to a partial or total blackout. This phenomenon can be

Power systems are transforming into more complex and stressed systems each day. These stressed conditions could lead to a slow decline in the power grid's voltage profile and sometimes lead to a partial or total blackout. This phenomenon can be identified by either solving a power flow problem or using measurement-based real-time monitoring algorithms. The first part of this thesis focuses on proposing a robust power flow algorithm for ill-conditioned systems. While preserving the stable nature of the fixed point (FP) method, a novel distributed FP equation is proposed to calculate the voltage at each bus. The proposed algorithm's performance is compared with existing methods, showing that the proposed method can correctly find the solutions when other methods cannot work due to high condition number matrices. It is also empirically shown that the FP algorithm is more robust to bad initialization points. The second part of this thesis focuses on identifying the voltage instability phenomenon using real-time monitoring algorithms. This work proposes a novel distributed measurement-based monitoring technique called voltage stability index (VSI). With the help of PMUs and communication of voltage phasors between neighboring buses, the processors embedded at each bus in the smart grid perform simultaneous online computations of VSI. VSI enables real-time identification of the system's critical bus with minimal communication infrastructure. Its benefits include interpretability, fast computation, and low sensitivity to noisy measurements. Furthermore, this work proposes the ``local static-voltage stability index" (LS-VSI) that removes the minimal communication requirement in VSI by requiring only one PMU at the bus of interest. LS-VSI also solves the issue of Thevenin equivalent parameter estimation in the presence of noisy measurements. Unlike VSI, LS-VSI incorporates the ZIP load models and load tap changers (LTCs) and successfully identifies the bifurcation point considering ZIP loads' impact on voltage stability. Both VSI and LS-VSI are useful to monitor the voltage stability margins in real-time using the PMU measurements from the field. However, they cannot indicate the onset of voltage emergency situations. The proposed LD-VSI uses the dynamic measurements of the power system to identify the onset of a voltage emergency situation with an alarm. Compared to existing methods, it is shown that it is more robust to PMU measurement noise and can also identify the voltage collapse point while the existing methods have issues with the same.
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    Title
    • PMU-based Online Voltage Stability Assessment and Power Flow Tools for Power Systems
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    Date Created
    2021
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    • Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2021
    • Field of study: Electrical Engineering

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