Synchronization of Cyclic Power Grids

Equilibria and Stability of the Synchronous State

Journal Article (2017)
Research Group
Mathematical Physics
Copyright
© 2017 K. Xi, J.L.A. Dubbeldam, H.X. Lin
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4973770
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Copyright
© 2017 K. Xi, J.L.A. Dubbeldam, H.X. Lin
Research Group
Mathematical Physics
Issue number
1
Volume number
27
Pages (from-to)
1-11
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Abstract

Synchronization is essential for the proper functioning of power grids, we investigate the synchronous states
and their stability for cyclic power grids. We calculate the number of stable equilibria and investigate both the linear and nonlinear stability of the synchronous state. The linear stability analysis shows that the stability of the state, determined by the smallest nonzero eigenvalue, is inversely proportional to the size of the network. We use the energy barrier to measure the nonlinear stability and calculate it by comparing the potential energy of the type-1 saddles with that of the stable synchronous
state. We find that the energy barrier depends on the network size ($N$) in a more complicated fashion compared to the linear stability. In particular, when the generators and consumers are evenly distributed in an alternating way, the energy barrier decreases to a constant when $N$ approaches infinity.
For a heterogeneous distribution of generators and consumers, the energy barrier decreases with $N$. The more heterogeneous the distribution is, the stronger the energy barrier depends on $N$. Finally, we find that by comparing situations with equal line loads in
cyclic and tree networks, tree networks exhibit reduced stability. This difference disappears in the limit of $N\to\infty$. This finding corroborates previous results reported in the literature and suggests that cyclic (sub)networks may be applied to enhance power
transfer while maintaining stable synchronous operation.

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