Capicitor Placement
Capicitor Placement
Capicitor Placement
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Article history:
Received 18 June 2013
Received in revised form 28 March 2014
Accepted 2 April 2014
Available online 13 May 2014
Keywords:
Capacitor placement problem
Load variation
Uncertainty
Interval arithmetic
a b s t r a c t
The paper reports on the solution of the capacitor placement problem in distribution system considering
uncertainty in the variation of loads. Solution techniques available in the literature generally consider
load variation as deterministic. In the present paper uncertainty in load variation is considered using
fuzzy interval arithmetic technique. Load variations are represented as lower and upper bounds around
base levels. Both xed and switchable capacitors have been considered and results for standard test systems are presented.
2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Introduction
Shunt capacitors are used in distribution systems as a source of
reactive power. If they are connected with proper location and size,
load terminal voltage can be maintained within the acceptable
limit and the line loss and total system cost can be reduced. As
the load demand on distribution system may vary with time for
effective compensation, capacitors are to be of xed as well as
switchable in nature, where a minimum capacitor kvar is always
kept connected to the system (xed capacitor) and additional
capacitors are switched in or out as the load demand varies. Determination of the size, location and type of such capacitors for a distribution system is a complex optimization problem and requires
information regarding the load variation of the system with time.
Different solution techniques had been presented by many
researchers in the past for solving the problem of placing capacitor
in distribution system. Modied discrete PSO based solution was
proposed in [3,20]. In [4,5], the capacitor placement was formulated as a mixed integer non-linear problem. [6,16,17] proposes
Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) based capacitor placement.
Loss saving equation based technique was proposed in [7]. In [8]
heuristics and greedy search technique based solution was proposed. Fuzzy reasoning based method was proposed in [9]. Simulated annealing was proposed in [15] and Genetic Algorithm
based solution has taken in [10,24] respectively. Interior point
based solution was proposed in [11,14]. Extended Dynamic Programming Approach was proposed in [12], Plant Growth
Corresponding author. Tel.: +91 9734248638.
E-mail address: manas202006@yahoo.com (M. Mukherjee).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijepes.2014.04.004
0142-0615/ 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
PLr
n
X
I2ri Ri
i1
91
M. Mukherjee, S.K. Goswami / Electrical Power and Energy Systems 62 (2014) 9094
Nomenclature
PLr
Iri
Inew
ri
Ri
Iril, Iriu
where Iri and Ri are the reactive component of branch current and
resistance, respectively of the ith branch.
But, actually Iri is not of xed value. Because, the load variation
in any power system cannot be truly represented by a single load
curve. Conventional way of representing load variation by a single
load curve basically represents the mean of load variation. A better
representation would be to use a curve like Fig. 1, where instead of
representing by a mean variation, the range of variation is shown.
So in the load duration curve, each load level is represented by a
range of load levels (like Fig. 2) rather than a single load. So it is
better to represent Iri as
X Y xl yl; xl yu
X Y xl yu; xu yl
Ic
Pcom
Lr
S
Vm
k
Qc
Vc
X Y X Y 1
where
Z 1 Z 2 A1 A2 iB1 B2
Z 1 Z 2 A1 A2 iB1 B2
Z 1 Z 2 A1 A2 B1 B2 iA1 B2 A2 B1
10
Z 1 Z 2 C iD
11
(A22
B22)
92
M. Mukherjee, S.K. Goswami / Electrical Power and Energy Systems 62 (2014) 9094
ful when more than one capacitor is to be placed. So the size of multiple capacitors for optimal location is to be determined
simultaneously and the procedure of nding optimal sizes is
described in the following sections.
Size of capacitors for interval load
Here also the method described in [7] is used with a different
manner. First load ow solution is done taking interval load [1,2].
This will provide lower and upper limit of all the branch currents.
Let the followings are considered:
k = number of capacitor buses
Ic = k-dimensional vector consisting of capacitor currents.
Determination of location
A radial distribution system with n branches is considered here.
Let a capacitor C is placed at bus m (except the source bus) and a be
a set of branches connected between the source and capacitor
buses. The capacitor draws a reactive current Ic and as it is a radial
network it changes only the reactive component of current of
branch set a. The current of other branches (Ra) is remain
unchanged. Thus, the new reactive current Inew
of the ith branch
ri
is given by
Actually Ic = [Icl, Icu], where Icl and Icu are the lower an upper
limit of Ic respectively.
Inew
Iri Di Ic
ri
12
(j = 1, 2, . . ., k)
D = a matrix of dimension n k
The elements of D are considered as
When the capacitors are placed in the system, the new reactive
component of the branch current is given by,
where
Di 1 if branch i 2 a
Inew
ri I r D Ic
0 otherwise
Here Iri, is the reactive current of the ith branch in the original system obtained from the load ow solution. The loss Pcom
Lr , associated
with the reactive component of branch currents in the compensated
system (when the capacitor is connected) can be written as
Pcom
Lr
aj = set of branches from the source bus to the jth capacitor bus
n
X
Iri Di Ic2 aRi
13
i1
Pcom
Lr
n
X
Iri
i1
The loss saving S is the difference between Eqs. (1) and (13) and
is given by
n
X
S PLr Pcom
2Di Iri Ic Di Ic2 Ri
Lr
14
i1
n
X
@S
2Di Iri Ic Di Ic2 Ri 0
@Ic
i1
15
Ic
n
X
Di Iri Ri
i1
X
Iri Ri
i2a
!,
!,
n
X
!
Di Ri
i1
X
Ri
16
i2a
17
k
X
!2
Dij Icj
Ri
19
j1
The loss saving S obtained by placing the capacitors is the difference between Eqs. (1) and (19) and is given by
"
!#
n
k
k
X
X
X
2
S
2Iri
Dij Icj
Dij Icj
Ri
i1
The capacitor current Ic, that provides the maximum loss saving
can be obtained from
18
Inew
ri
j1
20
j1
The optimal capacitor currents for the maximum loss saving can
be obtained by solving the following equations:
@S
0
@Ic1
@S
0
@Ic2
...
...
@S
0
@Ick
21
A Ic B
22
"
#
X X
Ajj Ajjl ; Ajju
Ri ;
Ri
i2aj
i2aj
23
93
M. Mukherjee, S.K. Goswami / Electrical Power and Energy Systems 62 (2014) 9094
"
Ajm Ajml ; Ajmu
Ri ;
i2aj\am
#
Ri
24
i2aj\am
Table 2
Possible choice of capacitor sizes and cost/kVAR.
Sl. No.
kVAR
($/kVAR)
1
150
.500
2
300
.350
3
450
.253
4
600
.220
5
750
.276
6
900
.183
Sl. No.
kVAR
($/kVAR)
7
1050
.228
8
1200
.170
9
1350
.207
10
1500
.201
11
1650
.193
12
1800
.187
25
Sl. No.
kVAR
($/kVAR)
13
1950
.211
14
2100
.176
15
2250
.197
16
2400
.170
17
2550
.189
18
2700
.187
where Bjl and Bju are lower and upper limit of Bj respectively. Also Iril
and Iriu are lower and upper limit of branch reactive current
respectively.
Only the branch resistances and reactive currents in the original
system are required to nd the elements of A and B. The capacitor
currents for the highest loss saving can be obtained as
Sl. No.
kVAR
($/kVAR)
19
2850
.183
20
3000
.180
21
3150
.195
22
3300
.174
23
3450
.188
24
3600
.170
Sl. No.
kVAR
($/kVAR)
25
3750
.183
26
3900
.182
27
4050
.179
where Ajjl and Ajju are the lower and upper limit of Ajj; and Ajml and
Ajmu are lower and upper limit of Ajm and both are same as branch
parameters are considered to be xed.
Bj Bjl ; Bju
"
X
i2aj
Iril Ri ;
X
Iriu Ri
i2aj
Ic A1 B
26
27
Table 1
Data for 10-Bus system.
From bus
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
To bus
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Impedance
R (ohm)
X (ohm)
kW
kVAR
0.1233
0.0140
0.7463
0.6984
1.9831
0.9053
2.0552
4.7953
5.3434
0.4127
0.6051
1.2050
0.6084
1.7276
0.7886
1.1640
2.7160
3.0264
1840
980
1790
1598
1610
780
1150
980
1640
460
340
446
1840
600
110
60
130
200
0:0060
0:0060
0:0060 0:0428
p:u:
Blowerlimit
0:0140
0:0361
p:u: and Bupperlimit
0:113
0:0265
p:u:
Table 3
Required capacitor for 10-Bus system.
Bus no.
4
8
Capacitor size(kVAR)
Lower limit
Upper limit
2700
750
3300
1050
94
M. Mukherjee, S.K. Goswami / Electrical Power and Energy Systems 62 (2014) 9094
Table 4
Comparison between original system and compensated system (10 Bus).
Original system
Compensated system
Active power
loss (kW)
Lower
limit
629
Upper
limit
974
Active power
loss (kW)
Lower
limit
521
Upper
limit
941
Lower
limit
105,672
Upper
limit
163,632
Lower
limit
88,240
Upper
limit
158,900
Table 5
Load duration data for the test system.
Load level
0.3
1000
0.6
6760
1.1
1000
Table 6
Required capacitor for 10-Bus system for different load level.
Load level
Bus No.
4
8
4
8
4
8
2
3
Capacitor sizes(kVAR)
Lower limit
Upper limit
750
150
1650
450
3000
750
900
150
1800
450
3450
1050
Table 7
Comparison of system cost between original system and compensated system (10
Bus).
Original system
Compensated system
Lower limit
Upper limit
Lower limit
Upper limit
$95,809
$126,820
$88,900
$116,990
Conclusion
The present paper reports a new formulation of the capacitor
placement problem considering uncertainty in the variation of distribution system load. Unlike the conventional approaches of considering the load variation by simply using a number of load levels,
the present paper represents the load variation by upper and lower
bounds of the loads at different load levels and introduces interval
arithmetic to incorporate the effect of such variation in the solution of the capacitor placement problem. As the basic aim of the
paper is to introduce the interval arithmetic technique in the
capacitor placement problem, the solution approach had been
made simple by separating the problem of placing and sizing of
capacitors. The capacitor locations are rst selected based upon
the sensitivity of capacitor introduction at the location. Once locations are determined, the size is then found out. The problem however is not decoupled and should rather be solved simultaneously
References
[1] Das B. Radial distribution system power ow using interval arithmetic. Electr
Power Energy Syst 2002;24:82736.
[2] Das B. Consideration of input parameter uncertainties in load ow solution of
three-Phase unbalanced radial distribution system. IEEE Trans Power Syst
2006;21(3):108895.
[3] Ziari I, Ledwich G, Ghosh A. A new technique for optimal allocation and sizing
of capacitors and setting of LTC. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst 2013;46:2507.
[4] Baran ME, Wu FF. Optimal sizing of capacitors placed on a radial distribution
system. IEEE Trans Power Deliv 1990(January):72534.
[5] Baran ME, Wu FF. Optimal capacitor placement on radial distribution system.
IEEE Trans Power Deliv 1990(January):73543.
[6] Prakash K, Sydulu M. Particle swarm optimization based capacitor placement
on radial distribution systems. IEEE 2007.
[7] Haque MH. Capacitor placement in radial distribution systems for loss
reduction. IEE Proc-Gener Transm Distrib 1999;146(5):5015.
[8] Goswami SK, Ghose T, Basu SK. An approximate method for capacitor
placement in distribution system using heuristics and greedy search
technique. Electr Power Syst Res 1999;51:14351.
[9] Su C, Tsai C. A New fuzzy-reasoning approach to optimum capacitor allocation
for primary distribution systems. In: Proceedings of The IEEE international
conference on industrial technology; 1996. p. 23741.
[10] Hsiao Y, Chen Chia-Hong, Chien C. Optimal capacitor placement in distribution
systems using a combination fuzzy-GA method. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst
2004;26(September):5018.
[11] Segura S, Romero Ruben, Rider MJ. Efcient heuristic algorithm used for
optimal capacitor placement in distribution systems. Int J Electr Power Energy
Syst 2010;32(January):718.
[12] Gonzalez JFV, Lyra C, Usberti FL. A pseudo-polynomial algorithm for optimal
capacitor placement on electric power distribution networks. Eur J Oper Res
2012;222(Oct):14956.
[13] Srinivasa Rao R, Narasimham SVL, Ramlingaraju M. Optimal capacitor
placement in a radial distribution systems using Plant Growth Simulation
Algorithm. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst Eng 2011(June):11339.
[14] Jabr RA. Optimal placement of capacitor in a radial network using conic and
mixed
integer
linear
programming.
Electr
Power
Syst
Res
2008;78(June):9418.
[15] Bhattacharya SK, Goswami SK. A new fuzzy based solution of the capacitor
placement problem in radial distribution system. Expert Syst Applic
2009;36(April):420712.
[16] Taher SA, Karimian A, Hasani M. A new method for optimal location and sizing
of capacitors in distribution networks using PSO algorithm. Simul Model Pract
Theory 2011;19(Feb.):66272.
[17] Kuo Cheng-Cheien. Capacitor placement and scheduling using iteractive biobjective programming with valuable trade off approach. Energy Convers
Manage 2009;50(April):9951003.
[18] Hamouda A, Sayah S. Optimal capacitors sizing in distribution feeders using
heuristic search based node stability indices. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst
2012;46(March):5664.
[19] Carpinelli G, Noce C, Proto D, Russo A, Varilone P. Single objective probabilistic
allocation of capacitors in unbalanced distribution systems. Electr Power Syst
Res 2012;87(June):4757.
[20] Ziari I, Ledwich G, Ghosh A, Cornforth D, Wishart M. Optimal allocation and
sizing of capacitors to minimize the transmission line loss and to improve the
voltage prole. Comput Math Applic 2010;60(August):100313.
[21] Tabatabaci SM, Vahidi B. Bacterial foraging solution based fuzzy logic decision
for optimal capacitor allocation in radial distribution system. Electr Power Syst
Res 2011;81(April):104550.
[22] Alefeld G, Herzberger J. Introduction to interval computations. New
York: Academic Press; 1983.
[23] Taher SA, Bagherpour R. A new approach for optimal capacitor placement and
sizing in unbalanced distorted distribution systems using hybrid honey bee
colony algorithm. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst 2013;49(July):43048.
[24] Boone G, Chiang Hsiao-Dong. Optimal capacitor placement in distribution
systems by genetic algorithm. Int J Electr Power Energy Syst 1993;15(June):
15561.