Published December 2023 | Version Published
Conference Paper

Modeling Unbalanced Power Flow with Δ-connected Devices

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

In this tutorial we present a simple approach to modeling unbalanced three-phase power flows. We allow general non-ideal models of voltage sources, ZIP loads as well as distribution lines and transformers. The basic idea is to explicitly separate a device/transformer model into an internal model, that depends on the characteristics of the single-phase devices or transformers, and a conversion rule, that depends on their configuration. This approach provides two benefits. First it facilitates the modeling of secondary distribution circuits where only the end devices are directly controllable, not the currents or powers at the secondary transformers. Second it allows us to exploit common structures across different device/transformer variants and derive their external models that are general and unified. We illustrate these benefits by extending a three-phase backward forward sweep method in the literature to allow secondary circuits and formulating a three-phase optimal power flow problem as a quadratically constrained quadratic program.

Acknowledgement

We thank the US NSF for its support through grants ECCS 1931662, ECCS 1932611, and Caltech’s Resnick Sustainability Institute and S2I grants.

Copyright and License

© 2023 IEEE.

Additional details

Funding

National Science Foundation
ECCS-1931662
National Science Foundation
ECCS-1932611
Resnick Sustainability Institute
California Institute of Technology
Center for Sensing to Intelligence

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Caltech groups
Resnick Sustainability Institute, Caltech Center for Sensing to Intelligence (S2I)