A Novel Power Flow Algorithm for Traction Power Supply Systems Based on the Thévenin Equivalent
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The Thévenin equivalent of a TPSS feeding section is introduced, which concentrates efforts on train nodes instead of all nodes. Fewer variables need consideration than in the previous algorithms. It can help with not only power flow analysis, but also the TPSS harmonic impedance calculation in resonance analysis.
- Node voltage equations are converted into port characteristic equations according to the Thévenin equivalent. The Newton-Raphson method is exploited to solve those equations, which has faster convergence than the MNFA. Besides, it has an easier approach to multiple solutions than the CPF.
- The RPF based on the PA is utilized to calculate the PSC of a typical China high-speed railway TPSS. Some practical recommendations are proposed to optimize the organization of train operations. The minimum intervals of adjacent trains are estimated.
2. Algorithm Description
2.1. Thévenin Equivalent of Feeding Section
- Identification of Ei
- Set all train currents to 0 A.
- Solve node voltage equations.
- Ei equals the voltage of train i.
- Identification of Zik
- Set the current supplied by the substation to 0 A.
- Set the current of train k to −1 A, and that of the others to 0 A.
- Solve node voltage equations.
- Zik equals the voltage of train i.
2.2. Port Characteristic Equations Solving
- Set the initial value of the train current vector
- Calculate the residual vector
- Calculate the Jacobian matrix
- Solve the corrective equationJ∆I = b
- If the norm of ∆I is smaller than a given value e, finish the calculation successfully. Otherwise, subtract ∆I from I and go to Step 6.
- If the number of iterations reaches a given value N, finish the calculation unsuccessfully. Otherwise, go to Step 2.
3. Numerical Results
3.1. Test System
3.2. Algorithm Properties
3.2.1. Convergence Speed
3.2.2. Ability to Find Multiple Solutions
4. Application to PSC Calculation
4.1. RPF Procedure
- Set the complex power of each train to 0.
- Choose a load change pattern and step length, namely how much the complex power of each train increases or decreases.
- Increase the power according to the chosen pattern and step length.
- Perform the PA. If the calculation converges, go to Step 3. Otherwise, go to Step 5.
- If the step length is smaller than a given value ε, finish the calculation. Otherwise, go to Step 6.
- Decrease the step length, for instance, by half.
- Decrease the power according to the pattern and new step length, and go to Step 4.
4.2. Case Studies
4.2.1. Case 1
4.2.2. Case 2
4.2.3. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Algorithm | Model Accuracy | Applicability to Feeding Scheme | Convergence Speed |
---|---|---|---|
[14] | Accurate | All | Linear |
[15,16,17] | Accurate | All | Quadratic |
[3,18,19,20,21] | Accurate | AT 1 feeding | Linear |
[22] | Accurate | AT feeding | Quadratic |
MNFA 2 | More accurate | All | Linear |
PA | More accurate | All | Quadratic |
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Section | |
Track | 2 |
Length | 30 km |
Public grid | |
System capacity | 5000 MVA |
Voltage | 220 kV |
Traction transformer | |
Connection | single phase with secondary mid-point drawn out |
Rated capacity | 40 MVA |
Rated voltage | 220 kV/2 × 27.5 kV |
Impedance | 8.4% |
AT | |
Location | 15 km and 30 km away from the substation |
Leakage impedance | (0.1 + j 0.45) Ω |
Trains | |
Locations | as depicted in Figure 4 |
Active power | the same value for all trains |
Power factor | 0.97 lagging |
Conductors | as depicted in Figure 5 |
Rail to earth resistance | 100 Ωkm |
Earth resistivity | 100 Ωm |
Initial values of the train voltages | 40 kV |
Convergence criterion | ‖∆I‖2 < 0.01 |
Train | MNFA | PA | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 26,162.81 − j 3049.25 | 26,162.79 − j 3049.25 | 0.02 |
2 | 24,639.93 − j 4664.22 | 24,639.89 − j 4664.22 | 0.04 |
3 | 25,585.18 − j 3666.87 | 25,585.15 − j 3666.87 | 0.03 |
4 | 24,784.16 − j 4552.74 | 24,784.12 − j 4552.74 | 0.04 |
Train | MNFA | PA | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 22,791.54 − j 6299.11 | 22,791.49 − j 6299.12 | 0.05 + j 0.01 |
2 | 18,037.97 − j 9100.00 | 18,037.88 − j 9099.99 | 0.09 − j 0.01 |
3 | 21,108.93 − j 7411.10 | 21,108.87 − j 7411.10 | 0.06 |
4 | 18,459.19 − j 8933.77 | 18,459.10 − j 8933.76 | 0.09 − j 0.01 |
Train | High Voltage Solutions | Low Voltage Solutions | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 26,162.79 − j 3049.25 | 15,959.64 − j 4789.04 | 10,203.15 + j 1739.79 |
2 | 24,639.89 − j 4664.22 | 1206.80 − j 3075.46 | 23,433.09 − j 1588.76 |
3 | 25,585.15 − j 3666.87 | 12,878.89 − j 5093.25 | 12,706.26 + j 1426.38 |
4 | 24,784.12 − j 4552.74 | 2848.02 − j 3879.99 | 21,936.10 − j 672.75 |
Train | High Voltage Solutions | Low Voltage Solutions | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 22,791.49 − j 6299.12 | 16,952.05 − j 7108.26 | 5839.44 + j 809.14 |
2 | 18,037.88 − j 9099.99 | 6071.67 − j 8086.42 | 11,966.21 − j 1013.57 |
3 | 21,108.87 − j 7411.10 | 13,760.17 − j 7954.93 | 7348.70 + j 543.83 |
4 | 18,459.10 − j 8933.76 | 6989.39 − j 8192.97 | 11,469.71 − j 740.79 |
Level | Active Power Consumption | Minimum Interval in Case 1 | Minimum Interval in Case 2 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 MW | <5 km/<1 min | <5 km/<1 min |
2 | 10 MW | 7.5 km/1.5 min | 7.5 km/1.5 min |
3 | 20 MW | 22 km/4.4 min | 15 km/3 min |
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Zhang, J.; Wu, M.; Liu, Q. A Novel Power Flow Algorithm for Traction Power Supply Systems Based on the Thévenin Equivalent. Energies 2018, 11, 126. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11010126
Zhang J, Wu M, Liu Q. A Novel Power Flow Algorithm for Traction Power Supply Systems Based on the Thévenin Equivalent. Energies. 2018; 11(1):126. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11010126
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Junqi, Mingli Wu, and Qiujiang Liu. 2018. "A Novel Power Flow Algorithm for Traction Power Supply Systems Based on the Thévenin Equivalent" Energies 11, no. 1: 126. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11010126
APA StyleZhang, J., Wu, M., & Liu, Q. (2018). A Novel Power Flow Algorithm for Traction Power Supply Systems Based on the Thévenin Equivalent. Energies, 11(1), 126. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11010126