Post on 15-Dec-2014
description
Challenges of Phasor Measurement Unit (PMU)
BySarasij Das
Content
• What is PMU?
• Why PMU?
• Applications of PMU
• Challenges of PMU
What is PMU?
• Power system parameters represented as ‘complex numbers’
• Phasors contain magnitudes and angles• Conventional instruments measure only magnitudes
of phasors• Local clocks used for time tagging of conventional
digital instruments• Inconsistent local clocks make it difficult to measure
phase angles
• PMU measures magnitudes and angles of phasors at higher rates (10-60 samples/s) with accurate time tag
• PMUs can be found as standalone device (N60 of GE) or integrated with power system protection relay (L60, D60 of GE)
Fig.1. GE N60 PMU [1]
Fig.2. Block diagram of a PMU [2]
Fig.3. Phasor representation
Fig.4. Architecture of PMU based WAMS [3]
Why PMU?
• Limitations of SCADA- Measurements obtained at slower rate (1 sample/1-4s)- Measurements are not time synchronised- Does not provide dynamic behaviour of system- Limited situational awareness conveyed to the operator
- SCADA is ‘X-ray’ of power grid where PMU is ‘MRI’
• August 14, 2003 blackout: - Problems developed hours before the system collapse - System operators were unaware of overall worsening system conditions
Applications [4]
Challenges
• Consistent performance required for a multi vendor PMU system
• Diverse requirements from all utilities - different application requirements - difference in infrastructure
• WAMS architecture - present architecture not suitable for large system
• High investment - initial high investment requirement acts as an deterrent - clear roadmap is needed
Challenges
• Lack of related products- not enough related products (PDC, application software)
• PMU placements - non-linear optimization problem
- currently one can get sub-optimal solution
• Visualization of PMU data - difficult to visualise the voluminous data
• Communication of PMU data- expensive communication network required
Challenges
• Communication delays - leads to delay in generating proper control signals
• Low frequency oscillation monitoring
- algorithms are computationally heavy - all modes may not be captured - distorted power system waveforms make it difficult
Challenges
• State estimation - deal with the hybrid system of PMUs and SCADA
- bad data estimation
• On line voltage instability prediction - higher computational requirement - lack of system models are the main challenges for this of application.
Reference
[1] http://www.gedigitalenergy.com/multilin/catalog/n60.htm[2] “Phasor Measurement Unit (PMU) Implementation and Applications”, EPRI
report, October 2007[3] “Synchronized phasor measurements and their applications”, by Arun G.
Phadke, John Samuel Thorp [4] Chakrabarti, S.; Kyriakides, E.; Tianshu Bi; Deyu Cai; Terzija, V.;
"Measurements get together" Power and Energy Magazine, IEEE issue January-February 2009, Volume 7, Issue:1, page(s): 41 - 49