
The Electric Power and Communica - tion Synchronizing Simulator (EPOCHS) system could provide great benefits to private industry and Department of Defense (DoD) power systems infrastructure by allowing simultaneous, synchronous simulation of communication and power system simulators to better understand the power grid under anomalous situations. Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems and the power grid infrastructure have recently been the focus of attention given the recent disclosure of potential cyber attacks. Applying Special Protection Schemes like the one used by the EPOCHS systems could provide a solution not only to cyber attack, but to possible cascading failures typical to power systems on current high-load demands. Utilizing an Internet-like architecture to implement such a backup and communication system is likely to be the most logical solution to providing a power grid intranet.
This work investigates the application
of an Exponential Weighted Moving
Average (EWMA) to be used as a memory
buffer in conjunction with Special
Protection Schemes (SPS) using
EPOCHS. It is proposed that using an
SPS incorporating EWMA can compensate
for the network layer lack of guarantee
of packet delivery, and provide for
the stability and integrity of the power
grid under a catastrophic event.
The work determined that the EWMA
can successfully be applied to the SPS in
EPOCHS, increasing its reliability under
all simulated network background conditions.
Using EWMA to create a buffer
provides the capability to retain some
information of the previous data, while
still retaining information of current
state of the system. However, using
EWMA for disturbance size calculation
introduces some error and thus steady
state after disturbance is not comparable
with the case not using EWMA.
Regardless of the error introduced, in
all cases the error is considered to be
acceptable and is within threshold value
to be considered the normal operation
state of a power grid.
The SPS with EWMA algorithm provides
statistically significant performance
gains over the previously used SPS
algorithm. The results indicate that the
proposed EWMA SPS ensures the protection
of the grid. The EWMA SPS has
a significant impact on performance
when applied to a heavy background
traffic network without router reservation,
enabling it to be stable without
the additional hardware cost. Overall,
in the tested configuration, the new
SPS system successfully maintained
steady-state operation under all traffic
intensities.
The largest performance gains are
seen when applying SPS with EWMA
while heavy background traffic and no
router reservation is present. In this scenario,
the SPS with EWMA improves the
minimum frequency from 58.35 Hz to
59.08 Hz while the system is in transient
or anomalous state, and stabilizes to
normal operating state of 60.35 Hz. This
effect demonstrates that the utility
intranet could be establish using standard
UDP protocols to transmit while
avoiding expensive router reservation
schemes deployment. In all cases, statistical
analysis of the injection of the
EWMA to the SPS metrics found that it
provided for a quick reaction to system
disturbances while minimizing errors in
steady-state stabilization.
This work was done by Luis A. Oquendo Class of the Air Force Institute of Technology. For more information, download the Technical Support Package (free white paper) at www.defensetechbriefs.com/tsp under the Information Sciences category. AFRL-0139
Optimized Robust Adaptive Networks in Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition Systems (reference AFRL-0139) is currently available for download from the TSP library.
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