Go top
Paper information

For power systems, geography doesn't matter, but electrical structure does

P. Cuffe, E. Saiz, A. Keane

IEEE Potentials Vol. 36, nº. 2, pp. 42 - 46

Summary:
In a national grid, where should a new power generating plant be built? In a competive electricity market, why do wholesale prices for electricity vary between regions? Such innocent questions are often met with rather involved technical and economic answers. How can a more accessible understanding of power grids be articulated, suitable even for a non technical audience? This article discusses one potentially helpful step in this direction: drawing power network diagrams in an electrically meaningful way, rather than using geographic maps that can obscure their inherent structure.


Keywords: Power grids, Industrial plants, Power system planning, Electricity supply industry, Power generation


DOI reference: DOI icon https://doi.org/10.1109/MPOT.2016.2587826

Published on paper: April 2017.

Published on-line: March 2017.



Citation:
P. Cuffe, E. Saiz, A. Keane For power systems, geography doesn't matter, but electrical structure does. IEEE Potentials. Vol. 36, nº. 2, pp. 42 - 46, April 2017. [Online: March 2017]


    Research topics:
  • *Steady-state: load flows, analysis of power system constraints, optimal load flows, voltage control ancilliary service,short-circuits, protections in transmission and ditribution networks

pdf Preview
Request Request the document to be emailed to you.