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Transcript
ECE 476
POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS
Lecture 1
Introduction
Professor Tom Overbye
Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering
About Me

Professional
–
–
–
–
–
Received BSEE, MSEE, and Ph.D. all from
University of Wisconsin at Madison (83, 88, 91)
Worked for eight years as engineer for an electric
utility (Madison Gas & Electric)
Have been at UI since 1991, doing teaching and doing
research in the area of electric power systems
Developed commercial power system analysis
package, known now as PowerWorld Simulator. This
package has been sold to about 400 different
corporate entities worldwide
DOE investigator for 8/14/2003 blackout
About Me

Nonprofessional
–
–
Married to Jo
Have three children



–
–
–
Tim age 13
Hannah age 11
Amanda age 9
Live in country by Homer
Like to bike to work
(at least part of the way)
Teach 2nd/3rd Grade Sunday School
class at First Baptist Church
My Kids
Simple Power System

Every power system has three major
components
–
generation: source of power, ideally with a
specified voltage and frequency
–
load: consumes power; ideally with a constant
resistive value
–
transmission system: transmits power; ideally as
a perfect conductor
Complications




No ideal voltage sources exist
Loads are seldom constant
Transmission system has resistance, inductance,
capacitance and flow limitations
Simple system has no redundancy so power system
will not work if any component fails
Notation - Power




Power: Instantaneous consumption of energy
Power Units
Watts = voltage x current for dc (W)
kW –
1 x 103 Watt
MW –
1 x 106 Watt
GW –
1 x 109 Watt
Installed U.S. generation capacity is about
900 GW ( about 3 kW per person)
Maximum load of Champaign/Urbana about 300
MW
Notation - Energy



Energy: Integration of power over time; energy is
what people really want from a power system
Energy Units
Joule =
1 Watt-second (J)
kWh –
Kilowatthour (3.6 x 106 J)
Btu –
1055 J; 1 MBtu=0.292 MWh
U.S. electric energy consumption is about 3600
billion kWh (about 13,333 kWh per person, which
means on average we each use 1.5 kW of power
continuously)
Power System Examples

Electric utility: can range from quite small, such as
an island, to one covering half the continent
–




there are four major interconnected ac power systems in
North American, each operating at 60 Hz ac; 50 Hz is
used in some other countries.
Airplanes and Spaceships: reduction in weight is
primary consideration; frequency is 400 Hz.
Ships and submarines
Automobiles: dc with 12 volts standard
Battery operated portable systems
North America Interconnections
Electric Systems in Energy Context


Class focuses on electric power systems, but we
first need to put the electric system in context of the
total energy delivery system
Electricity is used primarily as a means for energy
transportation
–


Use other sources of energy to create it, and it is usually
converted into another form of energy when used
About 40% of US energy is transported in electric
form
Concerns about need to reduce CO2 emissions and
fossil fuel depletion are becoming main drivers for
change in world energy infrastructure
Sources of Energy - US
About 86% Fossil Fuels CO2 Emissions (millions of metric
Biomass, 2.4
Other, 0.8
Hydro, 2.7
Nuclear, 8.1
tons, and per quad)
Petroleum:
2598, 64.0
Natural Gas: 1198, 53.0
2115, 92.3
Petroleum,Coal:
40.6
Natural Gas,
22.6
1 Quad = 293 billion kWh
(actual)
Coal, 22.9
1 Quad = 98 billion kWh
(used, taking into account
efficiency)
Source: EIA Energy Outlook 2007, Table 1, 2005 Data
Electric Energy by Sources, US
Nuclear Renewable
2.5%
19.4%
Petroleum
2.0%
Hydroeletric
7.1%
Gas
20.0%
Source: EIA State Electricity Profiles, 2006
Coal
49.0%
Electric Energy by Sources, Calif.
Renewable
11.3%
Coal
1.0%
Nuclear
14.7%
Petroleum
1.0%
Hydroeletric
22.2%
Source: EIA State Electricity Profiles, 2006
Gas
49.8%
Oregon is
71% Hydro,
while
Washington
State is
76% Hydro
Electric Energy by Sources, Illinois
Renewable
0.4%
Nuclear
48.9%
Coal
47.6%
Hydroeletric
0.1%
Petroleum
0.1%
Source: EIA State Electricity Profiles, 2006
Gas
2.9%
Global Warming and the Power Grid
15
What is Known: CO2 in Air is Rising
Value
was about
280 ppm
in 1800,
384 in 2007
Rate of
increase
is about
3ppm
per year
Source: http://cdiac.ornl.gov/trends/co2/sio-mlo.htm
16
As is Worldwide Temperature
Baseline is 1961 to 1990 mean
Source: http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/info/warming/
Change in U.S Annual
Average Temperature
17
Source: http://www.sws.uiuc.edu/atmos/statecli/Climate_change/ustren-temp.gif
18 Not
But Average Temperatures are
Increasing Everywhere Equally
Source : http://www.sws.uiuc.edu/atmos/statecli/Climate_change/iltren-temp.jpg
World Population Trends
Country
Japan
Germany
Russia
USA
China
India
World
2005
127.5
82.4
142.8
295.7
1306
1094
6449
2015
124.7
81.9
136.0
322.6
1393
1274
7226
19
2025
117.8
80.6
128.1
349.7
1453
1449
7959
Source: www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/summaries.html; values in
millions; percent change from 2005 to 2025
%
-7.6
-2.1
-10.3
18.2
11.2
32.4
23.4
20
Eventual Atmospheric CO2 Stabilization
Level Depends Upon CO2 Emissions
Regardless of what we do
in the short-term the CO2
levels in the atmosphere will
continue to increase.
The eventual stabilization
levels depend upon how
quickly CO2 emissions are
curtailed.
Emissions from electricity
production are currently
about 40% of the total
Energy Economics

Electric generating technologies involve a tradeoff
between fixed costs (costs to build them) and
operating costs
–
–
–


Nuclear and solar high fixed costs, but low operating
costs
Natural gas/oil have low fixed costs but high operating
costs (dependent upon fuel prices)
Coal, wind, hydro are in between
Also the units capacity factor is important to
determining ultimate cost of electricity
Potential carbon “tax” major uncertainty
Ball park Energy Costs
Nuclear:
$15/MWh
Coal:
$22/MWh
Wind:
$50/MWh
Hydro:
varies but usually water constrained
Solar:
$150 to 200/MWh
Natural Gas:8 to 10 times fuel cost in $/MBtu
Note, to get price in cents/kWh take price in $/MWh
and divide by 10.
Natural Gas Prices 1990’s to 2008
Course Syllabus









Introduction and review of phasors & three phase
Transmission line modeling
Per unit analysis and change of base
Models for transformers, generators, and loads
Power flow analysis and control
Economic system operation/restructuring
Short circuit analysis
Transient stability
System protection
Brief History of Electric Power






Early 1880’s – Edison introduced Pearl Street dc
system in Manhattan supplying 59 customers
1884 – Sprague produces practical dc motor
1885 – invention of transformer
Mid 1880’s – Westinghouse/Tesla introduce rival ac
system
Late 1880’s – Tesla invents ac induction motor
1893 – First 3 phase transmission line operating at
2.3 kV
History, cont’d



1896 – ac lines deliver electricity from hydro
generation at Niagara Falls to Buffalo, 20 miles
away
Early 1900’s – Private utilities supply all customers
in area (city); recognized as a natural monopoly;
states step in to begin regulation
By 1920’s – Large interstate holding companies
control most electricity systems
History, cont’d



1935 – Congress passes Public Utility Holding
Company Act to establish national regulation,
breaking up large interstate utilities (repealed 2005)
1935/6 – Rural Electrification Act brought
electricity to rural areas
1930’s – Electric utilities established as vertical
monopolies
Vertical Monopolies

Within a particular geographic market, the electric
utility had an exclusive franchise
Distribution
In return for this exclusive
franchise, the utility had the
obligation to serve all
existing and future customers
at rates determined jointly
by utility and regulators
Customer Service
It was a “cost plus” business
Generation
Transmission
Vertical Monopolies




Within its service territory each utility was the only
game in town
Neighboring utilities functioned more as colleagues
than competitors
Utilities gradually interconnected their systems so
by 1970 transmission lines crisscrossed North
America, with voltages up to 765 kV
Economies of scale keep resulted in decreasing
rates, so most every one was happy
Current Midwest Electric Grid
History, cont’d -- 1970’s




1970’s brought inflation, increased fossil-fuel
prices, calls for conservation and growing
environmental concerns
Increasing rates replaced decreasing ones
As a result, U.S. Congress passed Public Utilities
Regulator Policies Act (PURPA) in 1978, which
mandated utilities must purchase power from
independent generators located in their service
territory (modified 2005)
PURPA introduced some competition
History, cont’d – 1990’s & 2000’s





Major opening of industry to competition occurred
as a result of National Energy Policy Act of 1992
This act mandated that utilities provide
“nondiscriminatory” access to the high voltage
transmission
Goal was to set up true competition in generation
Result over the last few years has been a dramatic
restructuring of electric utility industry (for better or
worse!)
Energy Bill 2005 repealed PUHCA; modified
PURPA
Utility Restructuring



Driven by significant regional variations in electric
rates
Goal of competition is to reduce rates through the
introduction of competition
Eventual goal is to allow consumers to choose their
electricity supplier
State Variation in Electric Rates
The Goal: Customer Choice
The Result for California in 2000/1
OFF
OFF
The California-Enron Effect
WA
MT
VT ME
ND
MN
OR
ID
SD
WY
NV
WI
CO
CA
PA
IL
KS
AZ
OK
NM
RI
IA
NE
UT
NY
MI
MO
IN
OH
W
VA VA
KY
CT
NJ
DE
DC
MD
NC
TN
AR
SC
MS AL
TX
NH
MA
GA
LA
AK
FL
HI
electricity
restructuring
delayed
restructuring
Source : http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/chg_str/regmap.html
no activity
suspended
restructuring
August 14th, 2003 Blackout
2007 Illinois Electricity Crisis




Two main electric utilities in Illinois are ComEd
and Ameren
Restructuring law had frozen electricity prices for
ten years, with rate decreases for many.
Prices rose on January 1, 2007 as price freeze
ended; price increases were especially high for
electric heating customers who had previously
enjoyed rates as low as 2.5 cents/kWh
Current average residential rate (in cents/kWh) is
10.4 in IL, 8.74 IN, 11.1 WI, 7.94 MO, 9.96 IA,
19.56 CT, 6.09 ID, 14.03 in CA, 10.76 US average