andrewward
Electrical
- Aug 13, 2003
- 17
Hi All,
I have been dropped into the deep end of reliability analysis and probabilistic planning for power systems (transmission and distribution) and need to get up to speed very quickly.
I have read several IEEE papers on the topic and am now starting to understand monte carlo analysis and also the analytical methods. E.g. I understand the need for outage data (or monte carlo in the absence of outage data), cost of non-supply data, etc.
The papers cover the theory of combining outage statistics with contingencies in order to cacluate reliability indices. Also, they cover the theory of using monte carlo to calculate those indices in the absence of outage data.
But ... big but ... I still can't quite visualise how it all fits together from a practical point of view.
I tend to learn by doing so does anyone have some practical exercises that I can use to work through please?
I'd like to work through a monte carlo exercise from start to finish in order to see how to actually calculate the reliability indices. Also, I'd like to work through a similar analytical exercise (i.e. an example that uses outage data and an enumerated list of contingencies). I have access to Excel, Matlab and Digsilent powerfactory.
Thanks heaps
Andrew![[ponder] [ponder] [ponder]](/data/assets/smilies/ponder.gif)
I have been dropped into the deep end of reliability analysis and probabilistic planning for power systems (transmission and distribution) and need to get up to speed very quickly.
I have read several IEEE papers on the topic and am now starting to understand monte carlo analysis and also the analytical methods. E.g. I understand the need for outage data (or monte carlo in the absence of outage data), cost of non-supply data, etc.
The papers cover the theory of combining outage statistics with contingencies in order to cacluate reliability indices. Also, they cover the theory of using monte carlo to calculate those indices in the absence of outage data.
But ... big but ... I still can't quite visualise how it all fits together from a practical point of view.
I tend to learn by doing so does anyone have some practical exercises that I can use to work through please?
I'd like to work through a monte carlo exercise from start to finish in order to see how to actually calculate the reliability indices. Also, I'd like to work through a similar analytical exercise (i.e. an example that uses outage data and an enumerated list of contingencies). I have access to Excel, Matlab and Digsilent powerfactory.
Thanks heaps
Andrew
![[ponder] [ponder] [ponder]](/data/assets/smilies/ponder.gif)