4.4 Article

Multi-objective and multi-period distribution expansion planning considering reliability, distributed generation and self-healing

Journal

IET GENERATION TRANSMISSION & DISTRIBUTION
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 219-228

Publisher

INST ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY-IET
DOI: 10.1049/iet-gtd.2018.5037

Keywords

power distribution planning; power generation planning; distributed power generation; power distribution reliability; power generation economics; power generation reliability; power distribution economics; Monte Carlo methods; load shedding; minimisation; integer programming; nonlinear programming; smart power grids; load flow; multiobjective distribution expansion planning; multiperiod distribution expansion planning; distributed generation; self-healing; smart grids; computational model; mixed integer nonlinear optimisation problem; stochastic simulation methods; Monte-Carlo simulation; optimal power flow; loading shedding; power system components; installation period; investment cost minimisation; system reliability maximisation; IEEE-RBTS bus 2test system; IEEE-RBTS 90-bus test system; reliability analysis; fitness function value; reliability index estimation

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This study describes a methodology to solve the multi-period distribution expansion planning problem considering reliability, distributed generation (DG), capacitor and switch placement in the context of smart grids. The developed computational model is formulated as a mixed integer nonlinear optimisation problem and solved through the combination of meta-heuristics, stochastic simulation methods (Monte-Carlo simulation), and application of optimal power flow. The main objectives of this optimisation problem are defining the best choice to install power system components and determining the installation period and size of components to minimise investment cost while maximising system reliability. The proposed method was implemented in a modified version of the IEEE-RBTS bus 2 and in a 90-bus test system. The obtained results show a reduction of >20% of the operating cost and >70% of the average interruption time. In addition, it was performed scenarios not including DG, self-healing, and reliability analysis, individually. The analyses show the impact in the results by including a new variable in the expansion planning, increasing up to 40% in the fitness function value. Furthermore, it is presented with a discussion of the impact of the method to estimate the reliability indexes on the optimisation process.

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