The document discusses various techniques for evaluating the reliability of power systems, including loss of load probability (LOLP). LOLP calculates the probability of a power system's load exceeding its available generating capacity, taking into account the probabilities of outages of individual generating units. It provides a probabilistic measure of expected capacity shortages throughout a year. LOLP is widely used by utilities to determine the appropriate level of generation capacity needed to meet a specified reliability criterion.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
135 views
Unit 3
The document discusses various techniques for evaluating the reliability of power systems, including loss of load probability (LOLP). LOLP calculates the probability of a power system's load exceeding its available generating capacity, taking into account the probabilities of outages of individual generating units. It provides a probabilistic measure of expected capacity shortages throughout a year. LOLP is widely used by utilities to determine the appropriate level of generation capacity needed to meet a specified reliability criterion.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37
• The primary function of a power system is to provide electrical energy to its
customers as economically as possible with an acceptable degree of quality.
• Reliability of power supply is one of the features of power quality [6–8]. The two constraints of economics and reliability are competitive because increased reliability of supply generally requires increased capital investment. • These two constraints are balanced in many different ways in different countries and by different utilities, although generally they are all based on various sets of criteria. • A wide range of related measures or indicators can be determined using probability theory. A single all-purpose formula or technique does not exist. • The approaches and their respective mathematical expressions depend on the defined problem and determined assumptions. • Several assumptions must be made in practical applications of probability and statistical theory. The validity of the analysis is directly related to the validity of the model used to represent the system. • Actual failure distributions rarely completely fit the analytical descriptions used in the analysis, and care must be taken to ensure that significant errors are not introduced through oversimplification of a problem. • The most important aspect of good modelling and analysis is to have a complete understanding of the engineering implications of the system. • No amount of probability theory can circumvent this important engineering aspect. • There are two main categories of evaluation techniques: (i) analytical and (ii) simulation. • Analytical techniques represent the system by a mathematical model and evaluate the measures or indicators from this model using mathematical solutions. • Simulation techniques estimate the measures or indicators by simulating the actual process and random behaviour of the system. • Probabilistic simulation techniques are a subset of simulation techniques that treat the problem as a series of real experiments. The input parameters of each simulated experiments are obtained using Monte Carlo selection of their values. • Both categories of methods have advantages and disadvantages. • The Monte Carlo simulation requires a large amount of computing time and is not used extensively if alternative analytical methods are available. • On the other side, if the analytical methods are too complex, the probabilistic simulations can give a good approximation of results. • The resulted measures or indicators in both categories of evaluation techniques are only as good as the model derived for the system, the appropriateness of the evaluation technique, and the quality of the assumptions and input data used in the models. Review of Indicators Considering Loss of Power • Generation Reserve Margin • The installed capacity in power system must be higher than expected consumption. • A reserve power needs to be provided for frequency regulation and for case of major aggregate loss of capacity. • Generation reserve margin is a measure that shows how the capacity of power system exceeds the peak consumption. Generation reserve margin is defined as:
• Cost of an interruption is significant. The interruption duration cost is not necessarily a
linear function of duration. • Reported cost of an interruption of providing energy to the consumer is approximately 100 times higher than the average price of electric energy. • By power system planning, loss of generating capacities must be considered with a fact that consumption may not be covered the whole operating time. • Lack of production is shown with a risk degree. Percent Reserve Evaluation • The earliest method and most easily computed criterion for evaluation of generation system adequacy is the percent generation reserve margin approach. • This method is sensitive to only two factors at one point in time. • Percent reserve evaluation computes the generation capacity exceeding annual peak load. It is calculated by comparing the total installed generating capacity at peak with the peak load. • The criterion is based on past experience requiring reserve margins in the range of 15–25% to meet demand. • Satisfactorily meeting load demand meant that the frequency and magnitude of emergency power purchases from neighbouring power systems were reasonable and/or the number of curtailments was small. • There are, however, disadvantages of the percent reserves approach. It is insensitive to forced outage rates and unit size considerations, power transfer capacity, and failures in transmission network as well as to differing load characteristics of power systems. • Although this approach is a useful step in the analysis of generation reserve problems, it does not provide a complete answer to how much generation capacity is required to adequately serve load demands. Loss of the Largest Generating Unit Method • Loss of the largest generating unit method provides a degree of sophistication over the percent reserve margin method by reflecting the effect of unit size on reserve requirements. • With the loss of the largest unit method, required reserve margin is calculated by adding the size of the largest unit divided by the peak load plus a constant reserve value. • For example, if reserve requirements are 15% plus the largest unit, and the largest unit is 500 MW in a power system with a 5,000-MW peak load, then the reserve requirement is 15% + 500/5,000*(100%), or 25%. • This approach begins to explicitly recognize the impact of a single outage, that is, loss of the largest generating unit. • Probabilistic measures are necessary to extend this method to include multiple simultaneous outages. • Loss of the largest unit method, although simple, has a distinct advantage over the generation reserve margin method. • As larger units are added to a system, the percent reserves for a system are implicitly increased by this method as needed. • But similarly as percent reserve evaluation method, it is insensitive to forced outage rates of the units and power transfer capacity and failures in the transmission network. Static Analysis of Loss of Capacity • The basic probability principles and combining the different generating units are used for calculating the probability of aggregate loss of capacity. • The data and the results are usually represented in capacity outage probability tables. • The success probability or availability and its complement, i.e., failure probability or unavailability of each generating unit are the input data. • All combinations of available and unavailable generating units are presented in tabular form together with the calculated system availability. • Example of a power system includes three generating units. First two generating units (A1 and A2) have an output of 30 MW each and the third one (A3) has the output of 70 MW. • Unavailability of each generating unit is 0.02. Availability of each generating unit is calculated from unavailability and it is 0.98. Table 1 shows all possible combinations of available or unavailable generating units. Loss of Load Probability • A loss of load probability (LOLP) is a probabilistic approach for determination of required reserves, which was developed in the year 1947. This approach examines the probabilities of simultaneous outages of generating units that, together with a model of daily peak-hour loads, determine the number of days per year of expected capacity shortages. • Today, LOLP is the most widely accepted approach in the utility industry for evaluating generation capacity requirements. • Loss of load occurs whenever the system load exceeds the available generating capacity. The LOLP is defined as the probability of the system load exceeding available generating capacity under the assumption that the peak load is considered as constant through the day. • The loss of load probability does not really stand for a probability. It expresses statistically calculated value representing the percentage of hours or days in a certain time frame, when energy consumption cannot be covered considering the probability of losses of generating units. • This time frame is usually 1 year, which can be represented as 100% of time frame. In other words, the LOLP stands for an expected percentage of hours or days per year of capacity shortage. The LOLP actually does not stand for a loss of load but rather for a deficiency of installed available capacity. Loss of Load Probability • The term LOLP is closely related to the term loss of load expectation (LOLE), which is presented in next section. • If the time interval used for the LOLP is expressed in the time units instead in percentage values, the LOLE is obtained instead of the LOLP. • The generation system planners can evaluate generation system reliability and determine how much capacity is required to obtain a specified level of LOLP. • As demand grows over time, additional generating units are included in a way that the LOLP does not exceed the required criterion. • LOLP usually varies exponentially with load changes. While the effect of random outages is evaluated probabilistically, scheduled outages are evaluated deterministically. • Deterministic risk criteria such as percentage reserve and loss of target unit do not define consistently the true risk in the system. Loss of Load Probability Definition • Loss of one generating unit causes the expected risk of loss of power supply E(t), which is also known as mathematical expectation and is defined as:
where pi is the probability of loss of capacity, and ti
is the duration of loss of capacity in percent. • Loss of load probability for the whole system is defined as a sum of all mathematical expectations for all units: Loss of Load Probability During Scheduled Outages • The planner of power generation must schedule planned outages during the year, because the generating units must be regularly maintained and inspected. • Short-term maintenance process is continually updated. If a generating unit experiences a long-forced outage, the annual maintenance schedule for the power system can be reshuffled to further improve system reliability and to decrease the power system production costs. • Planned outage requirements of power plants usually have a cyclical pattern. • The maintenance procedure schedules the maintenance of generating units, so that available generation capacity reserve is the same for all weeks. This kind of procedure has the lowest LOLP. • The most widely used algorithm for scheduling maintenance consists of four steps: Arrange generating units by size with the largest unit first and the smallest unit last. Schedule the largest generating unit for maintenance during periods of the lowest load. Adjust weekly peak load by the generating unit capacity on maintenance. Repeat the second and the third step until all generating units are scheduled for maintenance. Loss of Load Probability Annual Calculations
• The annual calculations of the loss of load probability
are performed in four steps: Computing the annual maintenance scheduled of generation units. Building the capacity outage table using only the capacity available for service during particular week. Computing of daily outage probabilities and accumulating in a weekly index. The process can be repeated for each week in the year. Loss of Load Probability Optimum Reliability Level • One approach to calculate LOLP optimum reliability level is to base the design target on a historical review. • Another approach is an analytical one. The total costs of electricity for several different levels of the LOLP index are calculated. The LOLP level that provides the lowest total costs is selected. The procedure consists of four steps: Determine utility cost to improve reliability. Determine cost saving to electrical energy customers for improved reliability. Compute total cost as the sum of steps 1 and 2. Find the minimum cost by repeating steps 1, 2, and 3 alternate reliability levels. • The total costs include the costs of utility and costs to the consumer. Figure 1 shows the costs of power system. Loss of Load Probability Calculation • The easiest approach for calculation of LOLP is to represent the generation system with a state enumeration table. State enumeration table is a table, where the combinations of available and unavailable generating units are ordered in rows and the respective availabilities and unavailabilities of the generating units are considered for the system availability and unavailability calculation. • The combinations of available and unavailable generating units are expressed in terms of probability, where the product of availability of working units and unavailability of units in outage gives the probability of respective combination. • The state enumeration table can be arranged in monotonically increasing order of combinations of available and unavailable generating units in terms of increasing overall power of considered generating units. • The state enumeration table is further presented as a cumulative outage table for assessment of the probability of not being able to supply the necessary capacity. • The LOLP is obtained through multiplications of the obtained probabilities with the time intervals for the corresponding states and through the sum of those products. • Consider evaluating the probability of not being able to supply a 220 MW load demand. • Because the capacity of the three unit system is 350 MW, the load could not be supplied if capacity of 130 MW or more is on outage (350 - 220 = 130). • The probability of 130 MW of more in outage is calculated as a cumulative probability according to data from Table 12.4: • 0.00315 + 0.08835 + 0.00465 + 0.00665 + 0.00035 =0.10315 • Hence, the probability of not meeting load demand is 0.10315. Loss of Load Expectation • Loss of load expectation represents the probability that aggregates will not be able to cover the necessary power consumption. • The term LOLE is closely related to the term LOLP. If the time interval used for the LOLP is expressed in the time units instead in percentage values, the LOLE is obtained instead of the LOLP. • Figure 12.2 shows yearly load diagram. • The limit value of LOLE for a reliable supply is 10 h per year. • In some European countries, the limit can also be settled between 4 and 8 h per year. • Power system with a higher value of a LOLE has a lack of power charging or the existing units are badly disposable. Loss of Load Expectation Definition • Loss of load expectation can be obtained using the daily peak load variation curve. • A particular capacity outage contributes to the system by an amount equal to the product of the probability of existence of the particular outage and the number of time units. • The period of study could be week, month or a year. The simplest application is the use of the curve on yearly basis. • When using a daily peak load variation curve on annual basic, the LOLE is in days per year.
• where pi is the individual probability of capacity in outage and ti is
the duration of loss of power supply in days. • When the cumulative probability Pi is used, LOLE is defined as:
• LOLE is also defined with a probability that
consumption L will not be covered during working power capacity C. Input Parameters Input parameters for calculating the LOLE: •Consumed energy including losses •Influence of hydrology on hydro power plant production •Non-availability of coal power plants during scheduled outages •Non-availability of coal power plants during random outages •Import and export of electrical energy •Limited load in power system Evaluation Methods on Period Bases
The basic LOLE approach is very flexible. There
are three ways in which the LOLE method can be used to determine an annual risk index: • Monthly (or period) basis considering maintenance • Annual basis neglecting maintenance • Worst-period basis Monthly Approach • The appropriate capacity outage probability table is combined with the corresponding load characteristic. • If the capacity on maintenance is not constant during the month, the month can be divided into several intervals during which the capacity is constant. • This method assumes that the monthly peak can occur on any day during the period. • The total reliability measure is obtained by summing the interval values. • The annual reliability measure is the sum of the 12 monthly reliability measures. Annual Approach • The annual forecast peak and system load characteristic are combined with the system capacity outage probability table to give an annual reliability level. • A constant capacity level must exist for the entire period. • If the year can be divided into a peak-load season and a light-load season, the planned maintenance may be scheduled entirely in light-load season. Worst-Period Approach • In some cases, the load level in a particular season or even in a month may be so high, that this value dominates the annual figure. • A reliability criterion for such a system can be obtained using only the worst period value. • If the December is the month with the highest monthly risk period, an annual risk figure can be obtained by multiplying the December value by 12. Loss of Load Expectation Calculation • Also at LOLE calculation, the most convenient procedure is representing the power system in tables, including capacities, unavailabilities, and availabilities. • Usually, a daily load diagram is given and it should be considered. • All unit outage combination probabilities are calculated and represented as cumulative probabilities. • LOLE index is calculated as a product of expected load duration and cumulative outage probability for required state. Loss of Load Expectation Example • The example generation system consists of three units. Table 12.7 shows the corresponding generation system data. Figure 12.3 shows a daily load diagram. • There are eight combinations of generating units in outage or in service. • Mark 0 stands for outage of corresponding unit in the Table 12.8, mark 1 stands for operating unit in service. • The example on Fig. 12.3 with two load levels show 14 h of 60 MW between 4 and 18 h and 10 h of 30 MW between 0 and 4 h and between 18 and 24 h. • • At 30 MW: The applicable outage states for the LOLE are those outage states, where the capacity in service 30 MW is not reached, i.e., those outage states in the last two rows. The cumulative probability of those two states is 0.005. • Therefore, the LOLE is calculated as LOLE1 = 0.005 * 10 h = 0.05 h. • At 60 MW: The applicable outage states for the LOLE are those outage states, where the capacity in service 60 MW is not reached, i.e., those outage states in the last six rows. The cumulative probability of those two states is 0.145. • Therefore, the LOLE is calculated as LOLE2 = 0.145 *14 h = 2.03 h. • LOLE for whole day is a sum of both: LOLE = LOLE1 +LOLE2 = 0.05 h +2.03 h = 2.08 h • To get the annual LOLE, the calculations have to be repeated for every day. Review of Indicators Considering Loss of Energy • The area under the load duration curve represents the energy generated during the specific time interval and can be used to calculate an expected energy not supplied because of insufficient installed capacity. • The ratio between the energy curtailed because of reduced capacity because of specific capacity in outage and the total energy generated can be defined as energy index of unreliability. Its complement is energy index of reliability (EIR). • Any outage of generating capacity exceeding the reserve results in a curtailment of system load energy. • The probable energy curtailed is obtained as a product of a probability of magnitude of specific capacity in outage and the energy curtailed by a specific capacity in outage. The sum of those gives the loss of energy expectation (LOEE).
• where Pi is the probability of magnitude of specific capacity in outage, Ei is the energy
curtailed by a specific capacity in outage, and E is the total energy under the load duration curve. • Normalized loss of energy expectation (LOEE% or LOEE p.u.) is obtained by using the total energy under the load duration curve. • Normalized loss of energy expectation equals to energy index of unreliability.