Frequency violations from random disturbances: an MCMC approach

Frequency speed (RoCoF) evolution over time in three network nodes after a random perturbation

Abstract

The frequency stability of power systems is increasingly challenged by various types of disturbance. In particular, the increasing penetration of renewable energy sources is increasing the variability of power generation while reducing system inertia against disturbances. In this paper we explore how this could give rise to rate of change of frequency (RoCoF) violations. Correlated and non -Gaussian power disturbances, such as may arise from renewable generation, have been shown to be significant in power system security analysis. We therefore introduce ghost sampling which, given any unconditional distribution of disturbances, efficiently produces samples conditional on a violation occurring. Our goal is to address questions such as “which generator is most likely to be disconnected due to a RoCoF violation?” or “what is the probability of having simultaneous RoCoF violations, given that a violation occurs?”.

Publication
J. Moriarty, J. Vogrinc, A. Zocca (2018) Frequency violations from random disturbances: an MCMC approach. In 2018 IEEE 57th Conference on Decision and Control (CDC), Miami Beach, FL, 2018, pp. 1598-1603.
Alessandro Zocca
Alessandro Zocca
Tenured Assistant Professor