SmartGridModule3 Tostudents-1
SmartGridModule3 Tostudents-1
Technologies
and
Applications Dr. Hari Kumar R
Assistant Professor
Department of Electrical Engineering
College of Engineering Trivandrum
Module III
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Syllabus
Module III
• Smart Substations
• Substation Automation
• Introduction to IEC 61850
• Feeder Automation
• Geographic Information System(GIS)
• Intelligent Electronic Devices(IED) & their Application for Monitoring & Protection
• Wide Area Measurement System(WAMS)
• Phasor Measurement Unit(PMU)
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substations
Source of critical real-time data for efficient and safe operation of the utility network
Data are time critical and are used to protect, monitor, and control the power system field
equipment
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation
What to Automate?
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation
The deployment of SCADA and alarm processing to integrated volt/VAr control (IVVC)
Optimize the management of capital assets and enhance operation and maintenance
(O&M) efficiencies with minimal human intervention.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation-Terminology
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation-Terminology
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substations
Components
Sensors
SCADA
Master Stations
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Intelligent Electronic Devices (IED)
Microprocessor-based controllers of power system equipments with the capability to
exchange data and control signals with another device over a communications link
Multifunctional IEDs are fully IEC 61850 compatible and compact in size
and that they combine various functions in one design
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IED Functional Block Diagram
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IED Configuration
• Analog/ digital input from power equipment and sensors
• Flex-logic unit
• Internal RAM/ROM
• Display
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IED Types
According to use
• Used in generating station
• Used for transmission substation
• Used for distribution substation
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IED Application for Monitoring & Protection
Implemented not only to meet compliance requirements but also to save money
Typical applications:
Power fault reporting in the event of failures
Low-voltage Stabilization
Demand Response
Asset Management
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Sensors
To collect data from power equipment at the substation yard such as transformers, circuit
breakers, and power lines
Single sensor may serve different types of IEDs/ large number of IEDs via process bus
Control and data acquisition equipment compose a system with at least one
master station, one or more RTUs, and a communications system
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
SCADA - Schematic
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Master Stations
A computer system responsible for communicating with the field equipment and
includes a human machine interface (HMI) in the control room or elsewhere
Hardware components are connected via one or more local area networks
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Master Stations
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Master Station SCADA- GUI
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Master Stations: Types
EMS
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
SCADA Master Stations
Primary Functions
Data acquisition
Remote control
User interface
Report writer
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
SCADA Master Stations with AGC
Primary Functions
SCADA Master Station +
AGC
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
EMS
Primary Functions
SCADA/AGC Master Station +
State estimation
Contingency analysis
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
DMS
Primary Functions
Interface to automated mapping/facilities management (AM/FM) or geographic
information system (GIS)
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
DA System
Primary Functions
Two-way distribution communications
Voltage reduction
Load management
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Remote Terminal Unit
A microprocessor-based device that interfaces with a SCADA system
Provides data to the master station and enables the master station to issue
controls to the field equipment
RTUs have physical hardware inputs to interface with field equipment and one or
more communication ports
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
RTU Software Modules
Central RTDB that interfaces with all other software modules
Physical I/O application—acquires data from the RTU hardware components that
interface with physical I/O
Data collection application (DCA)—acquires data from the devices with data
communications capabilities via communication port(s) For example, IEDs
Data processing application (DPA)—presents data to the master station or HMI
Data translation applications (DTA) that manipulate data before they are presented
to the master station or support stand-alone functionality at the RTU level
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Technology Advances in RTU
Distributed architecture approach - with one smaller RTU for one or several pieces
of substation equipment
Have additional functionality, such as digital fault recording (DFR) and power
quality (PQ) monitoring
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
PLC
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substation
Technology Advances
Introduction of an open communications protocol (DNP3, MODBUS, IEC 61850)
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substation
Technology Advances: Substation Servers
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substation
Types of Data
Operational or real-time data
for operating utility systems and performing EMS software applications such as AGC
Nonoperational data
historical, real-time, and file type data used for analysis, maintenance, planning, and
other utility applications
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substation
Data flow
Operational data and nonoperational data have independent data collection
mechanisms
One logical data path connects the substation with the EMS (operational data)
A second data path transfers nonoperational data from the substation to various
utility information technology (IT) systems
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Historical Substation Design
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Substation with SCADA & RTU
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Substation with IED
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Substation with Integrated RTU and IED
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Substation with Integrated Remote Maintenance
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Architecture - Evolution
Substation with Bay Controller
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation Architecture - I
HMI Based Hardware Topology
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation Architecture - II
RTU Based Hardware Topology
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Substation Automation Architecture - III
Decentralised Topology
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Smart Substations
Migration path from basic SCADA to a full smart substation
SCADA Integration and Automation Smart Substation
Process bus
Power equipment and sensors (transformers, Power equipment and sensors (transformers, Power equipment and sensors (transformers,
breakers, reclosers, CTs, PTs, etc ) breakers, reclosers, CTs, PTs, etc ) breakers, reclosers, CTs, PTs, etc )
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC TC 57
Develops and maintains international standards for power system control equipment and
systems including EMSs, SCADA, distribution automation, teleprotection, and associated
information exchange for real-time and non-realtime information used in the planning,
operation, and maintenance of power systems
WG 3—Telecontrol protocols
WG 10—Power system IED communication and associated data models (IEC 61850)
WG 13—Energy management system application program interface (EMS—API, CIM, IEC 61970)
WG 14—System interfaces for distribution management (SIDM, CIM, IEC 61968)
WG 15—Data and communication security
WG 16—Deregulated energy market communications
WG 17—Communications systems for distributed energy resources (DER)
WG 18—Hydroelectric power plants—communication for monitoring and control
WG 19—Interoperability within TC 57 in the long term
WG 20—Planning of (single-sideband) power line carrier systems (IEC 60495) and planning of (single-sid
eband) power line carrier systems (IEC 60663)
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Introduction to IEC 61850
Allows for the implementation of multivendor solutions; and in addition to the communication
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Evolution of IEC 61850
•1994, Electric Power Research Institute/IEEE started the Utility Communications Architecture
(UCA) with a focus on the station bus.
•1996: IEC TC 57 (Technical Committee 57) began work on IEC 61850 to further define
station bus communications.
•1997: A combined effort to define an international standard that would merge the work of
both groups such that all vendors could interconnect to share data, services, and functions.
•Result: the international standard IEC 61850, “Communication Networks and Systems in
Substation Automation.”
•First issued in 2005 to standardize the exchange of information between all IEDs within an
automated substation and remote control links.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850 – Original Scope
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850 – Extended Scope
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850
An international standard defining communication protocols for intelligent electronic
devices at electrical substations
The abstract data models defined in IEC 61850 can be mapped to a number of protocols
These protocols can run over TCP/IP networks or substation LANs using high speed
switched Ethernet to obtain the necessary response times below four milliseconds for
protective relaying
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850: Objectives
A single protocol for complete substation considering modelling of different data required
for substation
Definition of basic services required to transfer data so that the entire mapping to
communication protocol can be made future proof
Define complete testing required for the equipment which conforms to the standard
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850: Features
Data Modeling — Primary process objects as well as protection and control functionality
in the substation is modelled into different standard logical nodes which can be grouped
under different logical devices There are logical nodes for data/functions related to the
logical device (LLN0) and physical device (LPHD)
Reporting Schemes — There are various reporting schemes (BRCB & URCB) for reporting
data from server through a server-client relationship which can be triggered based on
pre-defined trigger conditions
Fast Transfer of events — Generic Substation Events (GSE) are defined for fast transfer of
event data for a peer-to-peer communication mode. This is again subdivided into
GOOSE & Generic Substation State Events (GSSE )
GSE: Control model defined as per IEC 61850 which provides a fast and reliable mechanism of transferring event
data over entire electrical substation networks.
This model ensures the same event message is received by multiple physical devices using multicast or
broadcast services.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
IEC 61850: Features
Setting Groups — The Setting Group Control Blocks (SGCB) are defined to handle the
setting groups so that user can switch to any active group according to the requirement
Sampled Data Transfer — Schemes are also defined to handle transfer of sampled values
using Sampled Value Control blocks (SVCB)
Commands — Various command types are also supported by IEC 61850 which include
direct & select before operate (SBO) commands with normal and enhanced securities
Data Storage — Substation Configuration Language (SCL) is defined for complete storage
of configured data of the substation in a specific format
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Communication relations between functions
Information is exchanged between all devices which comprise the system
More precisely, data are exchanged between the functions and sub-functions
residing in the devices
The smallest part of the function that exchanges data is called Logical Node (LN) in
IEC 61850.
The objects called Logical Node (LN) may be seen as Containers containing the data
provided by a dedicated function for exchange (communication)
The Name of the Logical Node may be seen as a Label attached to this container
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Services with Data Sets and Control Blocks
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Naming and Groups of LNs
L System LN (2) M Metering and measurement (8)
Examples
PDIF: Differential protection CSWI: Switch controller
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Naming of LNs
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Communication Relations Between Functions
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Allocation of LNs to devices
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Allocation of LNs to devices
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Data Hierarchy
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Implementation Example of a Data Hierarchy
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Data Access and Transfer
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Data Access and Transfer
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Common features of Reports, GOOSE and SV
All these three services send data spontaneously, i.e. without being asked from a
Master or Client
For defining the data to be transmitted by these services, a Data Set is defined
comprising all these data out of the overall data model (for Report, GOOSE or SV)
The starting event (conditions) when the data transmission is started status has to be
defined in a Control Block (for Report, GOOSE or SV)
The starting event for Reporting and GOOSE messages may be a change of a value, a
crossing of a boundary, etc.
The starting event of sending synchronous sampled values (SV) is a “clock event”
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Distribution Automation
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
Main applications are categorized into four groups.
Fault location and automatic sectionalizing/service restoration, which primarily depends on
a switchgear
Volt/VAR control and optimization, which mainly employs voltage regulators and capacitors.
Advanced asset management, where sensors and metering devices are necessary
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
Power System Automation Components
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
Network Management EMS/DMS
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
EMS functional scope
The EMS is based on two main subsystems:
Supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) : incorporates applications like multiple
remote terminal unit (RTU) protocols in a non-proprietary environment, load shed, sequence
switching management, and disturbance storage and analysis.
Network analysis: power flow, state estimation, contingency analysis, short circuit, security
enhancement, optimal power flow, and Volt/VARdispatch information
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Feeder Automation
DMS functional scope
Steady-state performance improvement
Volt/VAR control
Feeder reconfiguration
Alarm triggering
Work orders
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Geographic Information System
A GIS is a system designed to capture, store, manipulate, analyze, manage, and present spatial or
geographic data
Database management
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Typical Communication Methods
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Wide Area Monitoring System
A collective technology to monitor power system dynamics in real time, Identify system
stability related weakness and helps to design and implement counter measures.(IEEE)
Uses GPS satellite signal to time-synchronize from phasor measurement units (PMUs) at
important nodes in the power system, sends real-time phasor (angle and magnitude) data
to a Control Centre.
The acquired phasor data provide dynamic information on power systems, which help
operators to initiate corrective actions to enhance the power system reliability.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Wide Area Monitoring System
Essentially based on the new data acquisition technology of phasor measurement and
allow monitoring transmission system conditions over large areas in view of detecting
and further counteracting grid instabilities
Main purpose is to provide system operators with a large information system with analysis
tools that increase detection speeds and response time in the event of risky situations
allowing the operators to make appropriate decisions efficiently preventing uncontrollable
events or cascaded outages.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Wide Area Monitoring System
Wide area monitoring systems help power system operators continuously analyze all
the features of a large power network in real time.
Collects, stores, transmits and analyzes critical data from key access points in large
power networks spread over huge geographical areas.
Helps detect system instabilities fast and early, thereby reducing the risks of
network blackouts.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
WAMS- Goals and Benefits
Post-disturbance analysis
Adaptive protection
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
WAMS- Components
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
WAMS- Process
Includes three different interconnected sub-processes:
Data acquisition
Data transmitting
Data Processing
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
WAMS- Data Resources
Operational Data
Non-operational Data
Eg:Digital Fault Recorder (DFR), Digital Protective Relay (DPR) and Circuit Breaker Monitor
(CBM).
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Digital Fault Recorder (DFR)
Identifies the one with the most significant disturbance.
DFRA performs signal processing to identify pre-and post fault analogue values, statuses of
the digital channels corresponding to relay trip, breaker auxiliary contacts, relay
communication signals, etc.
The expert system determines fault type, faulted phases, and checks and evaluates system
protection performance
.At the end, the analysis program calculates the fault location.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Digital Protective Relay (DPR)
This implies that data obtained from DPRs are generally less
accurate than from the other data resources.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Circuit Breaker Monitor (CBM)
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
WAMS- Applications
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Global Positioning System (GPS)
The GPS was initiated with the launch of the first Block I satellites in 1978 by US
Department of Defense.
The satellites have an orbital radius of 16,500 miles, and go around the earth twice
during one day
They are so arranged that at least six satellites are visible at most locations on earth,
and often as many as 10 satellites may be available for viewing.
The most common use of the GPS system is in determining the coordinates of the
receiver, although for the PMUs the signal which is most important is the one pulse
per- second.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Global Positioning System (GPS)
Representation of the GPS disposition
Signals from satellites are transmitted at two frequencies 1227.6
and 1575.42 MHz.
These are arranged in six orbital planes displaced from each other
by 60°and having an inclination of about 55° with respect to the
equatorial plane.
There are four satellites in each of the six orbits, which orbit
around the earth with a period of half a day.
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit
Phasor represents a sinusoidal signal with a magnitude and a phase angle (with respect
to a reference).
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit
A phasor measurement unit (PMU) is a device which
measures the electrical waves on an electricity grid using
a common time source for synchronization
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit
The first prototypes of the modern “phasor measurement units” (PMUs) using GPS
were built at Virginia Tech in early 1980s
The first commercial manufacture of PMUs with Virginia Tech collaboration was
started by Macrodyne in 1991
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit- Working
The current and voltage signals are converted to voltages with appropriate shunts or
instrument transformers (typically within the range of ±10 volts) so that they are
matched with the requirements of the analog-to digital converters.
Frequency and rate of change of frequency measured locally, and these also are
included in the output of the PMU.
The time-stamp is created from two of the signals derived from the GPS receiver.
The time-stamp identifies the identity of the “universal time coordinated (UTC)”
second and the instant defining the boundary of one of the power frequency
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit- Working
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
PMU Standards
The PMU can remotely communicate with several clients via TCP (Transmission Control
Protocol) / IP( Internet Protocol) and UDP (User Datagram Protocol).
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
General Architecture of PMU System
Hierarchy of Phasor Measurement Systems
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit
The IEEE synchrophasor standard 37 118 defines the format by which the phasor data
are transmitted from the PMU
The PMU provided the critical synchronized time-lapsed information that enables a
clear understanding of the events in the power system such as system stress or
modes of oscillatory disturbances
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Phasor Measurement Unit
PMU connection in a typical substation
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
PMU Applications
Line parameter calculation
State estimation
Voltage instability
Power oscillations
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
PMU Scenario in India
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum
Thank You
Dr. Hari Kumar R, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Trivandrum