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A Two-Stage Service Restoration Method for Electric Power Distribution Systems

Improving the reliability of power distribution systems is critically important for both utilities and customers. This calls for an efficient service restoration module within a distribution management system to support the implementation of self-healing smart grid networks. The emerging smart grid technologies, including distributed generators (DGs) and remote-controlled switches, although enhance the self-healing capability and allow faster recovery, pose additional complexity to the service restoration problem, especially under cold load pickup (CLPU) conditions. In this paper, we propose a novel two-stage restoration framework to generate restoration solutions with a sequence of control actions. The first stage generates a restoration plan that supports both the traditional service restoration using feeder reconfiguration and the grid-forming DG-assisted intentional islanding methods. The second stage generates an optimal sequence of switching operations to bring the outaged system quickly to the final restored configuration. The problem is formulated as a mixed-integer linear program that incorporates system connectivity, operating constraints, and CLPU models. It is demonstrated using a multi-feeder test case that the proposed framework is effective in utilizing all available resources to quickly restore the service and generates an optimal sequence of switching actions to be used by the operator to reach the desired optimal configuration.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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