EE330: Power Systems
Module 0 Lecture 1
                     Power Systems: General Introduction
                                                  Copyright Clause
    The instructor of this course (Dr. Abheejeet Mohapatra) owns the copyright of all the course materials. This
lecture material was distributed only to the students attending the course EE330 of IIT Kanpur, and should not be
  distributed in print or through electronic media without the consent of the instructor. Students can make their
                                   own copies of the course materials for their use.
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       General instructions about course
➢ All course details are available here
➢ Grading scheme: Relative
➢ Evaluation            Quizzes           30%
                     Mid-sem exam         35%
                     End-sem exam          35%
                         Total            100%
➢ Reference books are given in FCH
➢ Refrain from plagiarism and any form of malpractice
➢ A tutorial session shall be used for discussion, and will
  generally have a quiz
➢ No make-up for quizzes
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             History of Power Systems
➢ 1882 – first DC power system set up at Pearl Street Station
    in New York city by Thomas Alva Edison to light 11000
    bulbs for 500 customers
    (http://ethw.org/Pearl_Street_Station)
➢   Operating voltage was 110V DC and later upgraded to
    220V DC
➢   High copper losses in underground cables limited DC
    power distribution to lower Manhattan area only
➢   Pearl Station burnt down on January 2, 1890 and later
    decommissioned in 1895
➢   Transformers (William Stanley, 1885) & induction motors
    (Nikola Tesla, 1888) made use of AC systems evident
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         History of Power Systems Contd.
➢ 1889 – first single phase AC system installed at Oregon city
➢ Power generation was from two 300 hp hydro generators
    & transmitted to Portland via 4kV, 21 km transmission line
➢   1891 – first 3 phase AC system installed in Germany for a
    length of 179 km at 12kV voltage level
➢   Initially, there was no standard for frequency in 3 phase
    power generation (varying between 25Hz – 133Hz)
➢   Interconnection and parallel operation of different power
    systems was impossible
➢   Later, frequency was standardized at 60Hz (for USA and
    Canada) and 50 Hz (for rest of the world)
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        History of Indian Power System
➢ Visit https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/4510263/
➢ July 24, 1879 – first DC power system installed in Kolkata,
  by P. W. Fluery and Co. (British administered company)
➢ 1896 – first hydro installation (130kW) in Darjeeling by
  Crompton and Co.
➢ 1899 – first thermal power station (1MW) in Emambagh,
  Kolkata by Calcutta electric supply company (CESU)
➢ 1948 – Electricity supply act lead to modernization
   • State electricity boards: to regulate power generation,
     transmission and distribution in each state
   • Central Electricity Authority (CEA) to oversee planning &
     development at national level
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   History of Indian Power System Contd.
➢ 1975 – Electricity supply act amended
   • National Thermal Power Corp. (NTPC), National Hydro-
      electric Power Corp. (NHPC), Nuclear Power Corp. of India
      Ltd. (NPCIL) were established
➢ 1989 – NTPC segregated into
   • NTPC – operation of central owned thermal plants
   • Power Grid Corp. of India Ltd. (PGCIL) – planning, operation
      and maintenance of grid between states
➢ 2003 Electricity act superseded all previous acts
   • Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) formed
   • PGCIL divided into PGCIL for planning and POwer System
      Operation COrp. Ltd. (POSOCO) for operation of grid
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   History of Indian Power System Contd.
➢ 1991 – North Eastern & Eastern grids interconnected
➢ 2003 – Western grid interconnected to above
➢ 2006 – Northern grid interconnected to above
➢ 2013 – Southern grid interconnected to above to have
  ONE NATION, ONE SYNCHRONOUS GRID
➢ Voltage levels in India
   • 11.6kV and 21kV – generation
   • 765kV, 400kV, 220kV, 132kV – transmission
   • 33kV, 11kV – subtransmission/ distribution
   • 415V 3 phase/ 230V 1 phase – consumption
➢ Renewable integration target is 500GW by 2030
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     An Overview of Indian Power Sector
 Installed Gen. Capacity as on 31st May, 2023
Fuel                                                MW     %age
Total Thermal                                 2,37,269       56.9
                                  Coal        2,05,235       49.1
                                 Lignite         6,620        1.6
                                  Gas           24,824        6.0     **Renewable      Energy      Sources(RES)
                                                                      include Small Hydro, Bio-mass/gas, Urban
                                  Diesel            589       0.1     & Ind. Waste, Solar and wind
Hydro (Renewable)                               46,850       11.2
Nuclear                                            6,780      1.6
RES** (MNRE)                                  1,26,769       30.3
Total                                         4,17,668
        Sector                     MW      %age
        State Sector          1,05,726       25.3
                                                           All India Thermal Plant Load Factor :
        Central Sector        1,00,055       24.0          66.34% (provisional – May 2023)
        Private Sector        2,11,887       50.7
                    Total     4,17,668
        Source: www.cea.nic.in , https://powermin.gov.in/en/content/power-sector-glance-all-india
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          Some of the recent concerns
➢ Limited expansion of transmission network as compared to
  the generation expansion
   • Most of existing conventional gen and T & D system is old
   • Emphasis on combined expansion planning
   • Ancillary services – reactive power planning
   • Reforms in distribution networks/ microgrids/ smart grids
➢ Increased non-technical T & D losses
➢ Lack of dynamic data for health monitoring and control
➢ Increased concern towards vulnerability and resilience of
  the system under natural and man made disasters
➢ Growing environmental concerns – Renewable integration
➢ Poor customer participation in energy management syst.
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                           Smart Grid Network
 Transformed Power System Network - Utilities are poised to move from
 the traditional power system to a highly flexible, secured and green power
 system by using integrated communications and advanced control technology.
                               Wind Farm                                           Industry
                                                       Energy Storage                                   Commercial
                                                                        EV
Generation                                                                                                      Residential
                                Transmission
                                                                                Distribution
                                                                                 Network
                                                         Distribution
                                                                                                              Roof Top
                                                                                                               Solar
                                                                Microgrid
                                                                                      Wind
                               Solar Farm                                             Farm
             Power Flow in Smart Grid
                                                                                            Intelligent ICT Network
             Power Flow in conventional Power System
                                                                             (Fig. Source: Internet)
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               Indian Power Sector Management
Central Sector
Organizations               Authorities        R & D & Training
                                                                    IPPs
                            CEA, RPCs          CPRI, NPTI, PSTI
• Generating Utilities:
  NTPC, NHPC,
  NEEPCO, NPCIL                                                            Appellate
                                                                           Tribunal
• Transmission utility:
  POWERGRID                                                                Regulator
                                 Central Govt. (MOP, MNRE)                  CERC
• System Operation:
  NLDC, RLDCs                                                           Power Exchange
  (POSOCO)                                                              • IEX
                                                                        • PXIL
• Finance: PFC
• Rural Electrification                   State Govt.                      Regulator
  REC                                                                       SERC
                                    State Sector
  Trading Cos.            • Generation        Other
• PTC India               • Transmission     DISCOM
• NVVNL, ...              • Distribution                   State IPPs
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              Power System Operation
➢ Electric power system is a complex man made system with
  several interconnected elements and spread over a large
  geographical area
➢ Typical elements are
   •   Generation
   •   Transformers
   •   Transmission & Distribution
   •   Loads
➢ Classical vertically integrated power system has moved
  towards deregulation
➢ Several utilities own, control and operate different
  elements (except Transmission system which is still owned
  and regulated by POSOCO [now known as Grid-India since
  in Nov 15, 2022] and PGCIL in India)
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            Power System Operation
➢ Five RLDCs and at national level: NLDC (owned by Grid-
  India)
➢ Two exchanges in operation: India Energy Exchange (IEX)
  and Power Exchange India Limited (PXIL) – 2008
➢ Synchrophasor based WAMS being deployed in Regional
  grids
➢ PMUs provide voltage and current phasors, freq and df/dt
➢ Primary governor control action mandatory as per grid
  code
➢ Under frequency and rate of change of freq (df/dt) based
  relays for load shedding under emergency condition
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      Attributes of a Good power system
➢ QUALITY : Continuous supply at desired f and V
➢ RELIABILITY: Minimum loss of load / failure rates
➢ STABILITY : Synchronism (V, f) under disturbances
➢ ECONOMY: Minimum cost – operation & maintenance
➢ SECURITY : Normalcy of system during contingencies
     Provision of Energy Management System (EMS) at
                Energy Control Centre (ECC)
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                        Generation
➢ Generation system typically consists
   • prime mover/ turbine – source of mechanical power
   • synchronous generator/ alternator – converts mechanical
     power to 3 phase electrical power
➢ 3 phase AC power generation is a world wide standard
➢ Typical prime mover/ turbine is fed power through
   • steam generated through burning of coal (thermal) or
     fission (nuclear) reaction – high rpm turbines, cylindrical
     pole rotor in alternator
   • hydro – low rpm turbine, salient pole rotor in alternator
➢ Typical alternator has two parts
   • Stator - 3 phase armature or stator windings
   • Rotor - connected on same shaft as turbine, carries DC
     current
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                 Generation Contd.
➢ Stator field is produced by three phase currents
➢ Stator field rotates at ‘synchronous speed’
➢ Rotor field is produced by DC current
➢ Rotor rotates at ‘synchronous speed’
➢ Rotor excitation circuit supplies and controls the reactive
  power supplied/ absorbed by alternator
➢ Turbine power regulates real power supplied by alternator
➢ Practically, an alternator should never absorb real power
➢ Typical voltage generated at alternator terminal is about 3
  phase, line to line 20 – 25kV
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         Transmission and Transformers
➢ Transmission system transmits electrical power from
    far end generation to places near loads
➢   High voltages are preferred for minimum copper loss
➢   Step up transformer increases generation voltage level
    to high voltage of transmission system
➢   Transformers operate at high efficiency and are reliable
➢   Step down transformer brings down the voltage level
    to 11kV/ 33kV at subtransmission level
➢   Distribution transformer further steps down to 3 phase
    415V or single phase 230V
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                           Loads
➢ Entities which consume power and drive the electric
  power system
➢ Industrial loads are fed at subtransmission level
   • These are mainly induction motor loads whose power
     consumption is function of system voltage and
     frequency
   • These also consume high reactive power and require
     reactive power compensation at subtransmission level
➢ Residential loads are fed at distribution level
   • These are mainly heating and lighting loads whose
     power consumption is function of voltage only
➢ Inverters, battery storage systems and EVs
   • Have distinct operating characteristics
   • Mostly power electronics based loads (rich in injecting
     harmonics)
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                      Loads Contd.
➢   Real power unit is Watt (W)
➢   Reactive power unit is Volt Ampere reactive (VAr)
➢   Apparent power unit is Volt Ampere (VA)
➢   Energy unit is Watt hour (Wh)
➢   Loads vary & follow typical daily load curve
➢   Largest load or demand in a day is the peak demand
➢   Certain indices define usefulness of power consumption
➢   LOAD FACTOR (LF)
               Average Demand (W ) in 24 hours
          LF =
                     Peak Demand (W )
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                     Loads Contd.
➢ ANNUAL LF
                  Annual energy generated (Wh)
      Annual LF =
                  Peak demand (W )  8760 hours
➢ UTILIZATION FACTOR (UF)
                      Peak Demand (W )
               UF =
                    Installed capacity (VA)
➢ PLANT FACTOR (PF)
                Annual energy generated (Wh)
        PF =
             Installed capacity (VA)  8760 hours
➢ For economic plant utilization, these indices should be as
  high as possible
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      Types of analysis in Power Systems
➢ Steady-state analysis
   • Time period of interest – ideally ∞, no change in system
   • Power/ load flow analysis
   • For given snapshot of known network parameters, load and
     generation powers, steady state bus voltages are evaluated
   • Algebraic equations, Lumped sys. parameters
➢ Transient analysis
   • Time period of interest – few seconds to few minutes
   • Transient rotor stability, sub synchronous resonance
   • Following an electromechanical disturbance (fault, gen.
     tripping, line switching, etc.), is the system stable?
   • Algebraic and differential equations, Lumped sys.
     parameters
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       Types of analysis in Power Systems
➢ Sub-transient analysis
   • Time period of interest – few milliseconds
   • Fault / Short circuit analysis
   • Following a disturbance, what can be done to let the system
       remain stable (at least immediately after disturbance)?
   •   What is the maximum current flow?
   •   Aids in deciding relay settings, circuit breaker ratings, etc.
   •   Linearized system equations, Lumped system parameters
   •   Purely electrical in nature
   •   Mechanical dynamics ignored
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       Types of analysis in Power Systems
➢ Ultra-fast transient analysis
   • Time period of interest – few micro to milliseconds
   • Impulse insulation testing during lightening, EHV cable
       switching
   •   Results in electromagnetic wave in line which can be
       described as exchange on energy between inductance
       (magnetic energy) and capacitance (electrostatic energy)
   •   High voltage build up/ current surge is evaluated
   •   Is system insulation capable of protecting the system?
   •   Coupled/ linearized differential equations, distributed
       system parameters
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             Power System Protection
➢ Essential for satisfactory operation of power system
➢ System is subject to faults, accidental tripping, etc.
➢ Protection system typically consists of
   • Fuses
   • Instrument transformers – step down electrical voltage and
      current to low voltage and current
   • Relays – specific relay for each element
   • Circuit breakers
➢ Instrument transformers sense system signals, relay
  performs comparison and circuit breaker performs
  disconnection of faulty system from healthy part of
  system
➢ A good protection system should be simple, accurate,
  reliable, and fast
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                Next module/ lecture
➢ Basic circuit principles
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