Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Optimal Placement and Sizing Method to Improve the Voltage Stability Margin in a Distribution System Using Distributed Generation

482

Citations

19

References

2012

Year

TLDR

Distributed generation penetration has grown, making its effect on voltage stability and voltage profile a critical concern that can be addressed through optimization techniques. This paper proposes a method for locating and sizing DG units to enhance the voltage stability margin. The method models load and renewable generation probabilistically, selects voltage‑sensitive buses, and formulates a mixed‑integer nonlinear program to optimize DG placement and sizing within voltage, feeder capacity, and penetration constraints.

Abstract

Recently, integration of distributed generation (DG) in distribution systems has increased to high penetration levels. The impact of DG units on the voltage stability margins has become significant. Optimization techniques are tools which can be used to locate and size the DG units in the system, so as to utilize these units optimally within certain limits and constraints. Thus, the impacts of DG units issues, such as voltage stability and voltage profile, can be analyzed effectively. The ultimate goal of this paper is to propose a method of locating and sizing DG units so as to improve the voltage stability margin. The load and renewable DG generation probabilistic nature are considered in this study. The proposed method starts by selecting candidate buses into which to install the DG units on the system, prioritizing buses which are sensitive to voltage profile and thus improve the voltage stability margin. The DG units' placement and sizing is formulated using mixed-integer nonlinear programming, with an objective function of improving the stability margin; the constraints are the system voltage limits, feeders' capacity, and the DG penetration level.

References

YearCitations

Page 1