Volume 24, Issue 8-9 pp. 1403-1430
Fault Tolerant Control in Power Grids

Distributed sensor fault detection and isolation for multimachine power systems

Qi Zhang

Qi Zhang

Department of Electrical Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435 USA

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Xiaodong Zhang

Corresponding Author

Xiaodong Zhang

Department of Electrical Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435 USA

Correspondence to: Xiaodong Zhang, Department of Electrical Engineering, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435, USA.

E-mail: [email protected]

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Marios M. Polycarpou

Marios M. Polycarpou

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, KIOS Research Center for Intelligent Systems and Networks, University of Cyprus, Nicosia 1678, Cyprus

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Thomas Parisini

Thomas Parisini

Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, UK

Department of Engineering and Architecture, University of Trieste, Italy

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First published: 28 February 2014
Citations: 25

SUMMARY

This paper presents a distributed sensor fault detection and isolation (FDI) scheme for multimachine power systems. Each generator is interconnected with other generators through a transmission network, where the interactions between directly interconnected generators are nonlinear. In the distributed FDI scheme, a local FDI component is designed for each generator excitation system in the power system based on local measurements and certain communicated information from other FDI components associated with generators that are directly interconnected to the local generator. In each FDI component, adaptive thresholds for distributed FDI are derived, ensuring robustness with respect to nonlinear interconnection and unstructured modeling uncertainty under certain conditions. Furthermore, the fault detectability and isolability properties are investigated, characterizing the class of sensor faults that are detectable and isolable by the distributed FDI method. In addition, the stability and learning capability of the local adaptive fault isolation estimators designed for each generator is derived. A simulation example of a two-machine power system is used to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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