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Transient Stability Aspects of Renewable Generation Integration Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [email protected] September 13, 2016

Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [email protected] September 13,

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Page 1: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Transient Stability Aspects of Renewable Generation Integration

Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

[email protected] September 13, 2016

Page 2: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Overview

•  Interconnected electric grids are going to play a key role in the development of our sustainable energy future – In the US about 40% of our energy transported as

electricity, a value that should be increasing as transportation becomes more electrified

– Most non-carbon energy is first converted into electricity

– Off-grid options are unlikely to supply a significant percent of our energy needs

•  Presentation covers implications of large-scale renewable integration on electric grid dynamics

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Page 3: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Where We Got Our Energy in 2015 3

Petroleum, 36.2

Coal, 16

Natural Gas, 29

Nuclear, 8.6Hydro, 2.5

Biomass, 4.8 Wind, 1.9

About 81% Fossil Fuels (86% in 1990 and 2000)

In 2015 we got about 1.9% of our energy from wind and 0.6% from solar (PV and solar thermal), 0.2% from geothermal

Source: EIA Monthly Energy Review, July 2016

Page 4: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Renewable Energy Consumption 4

Source: EIA Monthly Energy Review, July 2016

Page 5: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Growth in US Wind Power Capacity 5

Source: AWEA Wind Power Outlook 2 Qtr, 2016

Page 6: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Wind Capacity Installations by State 6

Source: AWEA Wind Power Outlook 2 Qtr, 2016

Page 7: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Natural Gas and Electricity 7

Marginal cost for natural gas fired electricity price in $/MWh is about 7-10 times gas price

Source: http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/rngwhhdW.htm

Page 8: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

US Transmission Grid 8

Voltages up to 765 kV; Highly inter- connected but with some what limited long distance power transfer capabilities

Page 9: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

What Makes the Grid Unique

•  Each electric interconnect is one large circuit •  Fast system propagation of disturbances throughout

an interconnect. •  There is no mechanism to efficiently store electric

energy: generation must equal load – only several seconds of kinetic energy stored – no equivalent of busy signal, or holding pattern

•  With few exceptions, there is mechanism to directly control power flow in grid – flow is dictated by impedance of lines; “loop flow” is a

significant problem on some systems

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Page 10: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Power System Time Frames

Lightning Propagation

Switching Surges

Stator Transients and Subsynchronous Resonance

Transient Stability

Governor and Load Frequency Control

Boiler and Long-Term Dynamics; power flow

10-7 10-5 10-3 0.1 10 103 105

Time (Seconds)

Image: Sauer, P.W., M. A. Pai, Power System Dynamics and Stability, Stripes Publishing, 2007

Page 11: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

The Grid Needs to Be Resilient to Lots of Disturbances

•  Lightning strike sequence of events: 1) lightning strikes line causing a fault, 2) circuit breakers deenergize line in a few cycles, clearing fault, 3) circuit breakers reclose within several seconds restoring line.

•  But ice, tornados and hurricanes can bring large-scale damage.

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Page 12: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Frequency Response for Generation Loss

•  In response to rapid loss of generation, in the initial seconds the system frequency will decrease as energy stored in the rotating masses is transformed into electric energy – Solar PV has no inertia, and for most new wind turbines

the inertia is not seen by the system •  Within seconds governors respond, increasing power

output of controllable generation – Solar PV and wind are usually operated at maximum

power so they have no reserves to contribute

Page 13: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

But It Can Fail Dramatically 13

August 14, 2003 Blackout

Page 14: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Power Grid Disturbance Example 14

Time in Seconds

Figures show the frequency change as a result of the sudden loss of a large amount of generation in the Southern WECC

Frequency Contour

20191817161514131211109876543210

6059.9959.9859.9759.9659.9559.9459.9359.9259.9159.959.8959.8859.8759.8659.8559.8459.8359.8259.8159.859.7959.7859.7759.7659.7559.7459.73

Green is bus quite close to location of generator trip while blue and red are Alberta buses. Black is BPA.

Page 15: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Disturbance Animation 15

Page 16: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Renewable Generation Implications

•  Over last several decades the grid has been stabilized by the inertia provide by large generators, mostly coal and nuclear

•  The integration of large amounts (e.g., 50%) of wind and solar PV requires enhanced controls to handle the potential for larger frequency excursions

•  More dispersed renewable resources are less likely to suddenly fail, but can be subject to more prolonged, correlated changes – Cloud bank moving in over a region that contains lots

of solar PV – Rapid decrease in wind over large region

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Page 17: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Impact of Generator Inertia and Governor Response for Small Case

•  Figure shows inertia determines initial frequency drop rate, and governor speed the recovery

17

The least frequency deviation occurs with high inertia and fast governors

Page 18: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Power System Dynamics Motivation: August 14th 2003 Blackout

18

Image source: August 14 2003 Blackout Final Report, Figure 6.26

Page 19: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Control Implications

•  Possible solutions include – Operating renewable generation at values below

maximum power output to provide reserves; this helps with governor response but not inertia

– More controllable load; if response is fast (less than about 2 seconds) this can help with inertia response

– Modified wind controls to mimic inertia – Markets that correctly price value provided by inertia

•  Frequency provides a useful control signal – Universally available; because of propagation delays

communication based control may be faster

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Page 20: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Valuing Inertia and Locational Impacts

•  Electric grids need inertia to withstand disturbances •  An open research issue is how to correctly value this

inertia •  Another related issue is how much location matters

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Time (Seconds)20191817161514131211109876543210

Freq

uenc

y (H

z)

60.0460.02

6059.9859.9659.9459.9259.9

59.8859.8659.8459.8259.8

59.7859.7659.7459.7259.7

59.6859.66

Frequency, Bus 54490gfedcb Frequency, Bus 51667gfedcb Frequency, Bus 40687gfedcbFrequency, Bus 30018gfedcb Frequency, Bus 24086gfedcb Frequency, Bus 14931gfedcbFrequency, Bus 11217gfedcb Frequency, Bus 62994gfedcb Frequency, Bus 70627gfedcbFrequency, Bus 18443gfedcb

Time (Seconds)20191817161514131211109876543210

Freq

uenc

y (H

z)

60.0460.02

6059.9859.9659.9459.9259.9

59.8859.8659.8459.8259.8

59.7859.7659.7459.7259.7

59.6859.66

Frequency, Bus 54490gfedcb Frequency, Bus 51667gfedcb Frequency, Bus 40687gfedcbFrequency, Bus 30018gfedcb Frequency, Bus 24086gfedcb Frequency, Bus 14931gfedcbFrequency, Bus 11217gfedcb Frequency, Bus 62994gfedcb Frequency, Bus 70627gfedcbFrequency, Bus 18443gfedcb

100% in Subregion 10% in Subregion

Page 21: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

A Driver of Research: Synthetic Models

•  Access to actual grid models is limited because of confidentiality concerns

•  New research is ongoing in the development of synthetic models – Mimic actual grid

•  Being used in ISEE for coupled infrastructure research

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Page 22: Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign … · 2016. 12. 21. · Thomas J. Overbye University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign overbye@illinois.edu September 13,

Thank You! 22