Location

Grand Wailea, Hawaii

Event Website

https://hicss.hawaii.edu/

Start Date

7-1-2020 12:00 AM

End Date

10-1-2020 12:00 AM

Description

Risk assessment of power system failures induced by low-frequency, high-impact rare events is of paramount importance to power system planners and operators. In this paper, we develop a cost-effective multi-surrogate method based on multifidelity model for assessing risks in probabilistic power-flow analysis under rare events. Specifically, multiple polynomial-chaos-expansion-based surrogate models are constructed to reproduce power system responses to the stochastic changes of the load and the random occurrence of component outages. These surrogates then propagate a large number of samples at negligible computation cost and thus efficiently screen out the samples associated with high-risk rare events. The results generated by the surrogates, however, may be biased for the samples located in the low-probability tail regions that are critical to power system risk assessment. To resolve this issue, the original high-fidelity power system model is adopted to fine-tune the estimation results of low-fidelity surrogates by reevaluating only a small portion of the samples. This multifidelity model approach greatly improves the computational efficiency of the traditional Monte Carlo method used in computing the risk-event probabilities under rare events without sacrificing computational accuracy.

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Jan 7th, 12:00 AM Jan 10th, 12:00 AM

An Efficient Multifidelity Model for Assessing Risk Probabilities in Power Systems under Rare Events

Grand Wailea, Hawaii

Risk assessment of power system failures induced by low-frequency, high-impact rare events is of paramount importance to power system planners and operators. In this paper, we develop a cost-effective multi-surrogate method based on multifidelity model for assessing risks in probabilistic power-flow analysis under rare events. Specifically, multiple polynomial-chaos-expansion-based surrogate models are constructed to reproduce power system responses to the stochastic changes of the load and the random occurrence of component outages. These surrogates then propagate a large number of samples at negligible computation cost and thus efficiently screen out the samples associated with high-risk rare events. The results generated by the surrogates, however, may be biased for the samples located in the low-probability tail regions that are critical to power system risk assessment. To resolve this issue, the original high-fidelity power system model is adopted to fine-tune the estimation results of low-fidelity surrogates by reevaluating only a small portion of the samples. This multifidelity model approach greatly improves the computational efficiency of the traditional Monte Carlo method used in computing the risk-event probabilities under rare events without sacrificing computational accuracy.

https://aisel.aisnet.org/hicss-53/es/markets/6