Observability of Power-Distribution Systems

State-Estimation Techniques and Approaches

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Springer


Paru le : 2020-02-04



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Description



Ce livre développe, met en œuvre et évalue de manière approfondie un modèle d'estimation de l'état du système de distribution (DSSE) à trois phases. Il rassemble toutes les connaissances de pointe pertinentes et fournit les pièces manquantes pour offrir aux lecteurs un tableau complet de plusieurs facteurs essentiels de conception et de mise en œuvre et des moyens d'y remédier. Le

livre présente un modèle de branche triphasé qui permet de modéliser des conducteurs, des transformateurs, des changeurs de prises et des régulateurs de tension. Ses principales caractéristiques sont les suivantes : -modélisation


de tous les principaux composants de la distribution d'électricité ;
-analyse de
sensibilité

; et
-solution

numérique du problème d'estimation.


Ce livre présente un compte-rendu ciblé de l'ESSD triphasé, ce qui le rend intéressant pour les étudiants de troisième cycle, les chercheurs et les ingénieurs dans le domaine des systèmes électriques et des systèmes de distribution.


Pages
108 pages
Collection
n.c
Parution
2020-02-04
Marque
Springer
EAN papier
9783030394752
EAN PDF
9783030394769

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
1
Nombre pages imprimables
10
Taille du fichier
4639 Ko
Prix
52,74 €
EAN EPUB
9783030394769

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
1
Nombre pages imprimables
10
Taille du fichier
6851 Ko
Prix
52,74 €

Urban Kuhar graduated at University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering in 2012 and obtained Ph.D. in 2018 at Jožef Stefan International Postgraduate School, Ljubljana, Slovenia. He joined the Department of Communication Systems at the Jožef Stefan Institute in 2013. He worked in the field of high-frequency satellite communications, where he designed a Ka-band satellite beacon receiver within the ESA SatProSi project. He designed a synchrophasor measurement device suitable for distribution power networks, and designed and implemented a three-phase distribution state estimator software within the FP7 SUNSEED project. His research interests are related to digital signal processing, statistical signal processing techniques, and synchrophasor applications for power distribution systems.

Gregor Kosec graduated at University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics in 2006 and obtained Ph.D. in 2011 at University of Nova Gorica. In 2011, he became a member of Parallel and Distributed Systems Laboratory at Jožef Stefan Institute. His main research interest covers physical modelling, computational physics, meshless methods, and generic programming. In cooperation with colleagues he published 25 peer reviewed original scientific papers, a scientific monograph in Springer, 4 book chapters, and presented his work at 25 international conferences. He was awarded with 4 international rewards and 2 domestic rewards, namely with reward for exceptional contribution to the sustainable development and with Puh Certificate of Recognition. He is an active reviewer for several international scientific journals and is also active in organization of international conferences. In 2015 he led applied project “Analysis of de-icing by operational countermeasures” for ELES, Ltd., Electricity Transmission System Operator, followed by project Dynamic Thermal Rating of overhead power lines in icing conditions (DTRi) funded by FP7 TETRACOM. In 2017 he led project “Cooling of overhead power lines in low wind regimes” again for ELES, Ltd. From 2016 he is involved in FWO funded project “Multi-analysis of fretting fatigue using physical and virtual experiments” and in a technology transfer “System for mobile monitoring of vital physiological parameters and environmental context”.

Aleš Švigelj received his B.Sc., M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia, in 1997, 2000 and 2003 respectively. He is a senior research fellow in the Department of Communication Systems at the Jožef Stefan Institute and associate professor at the Jožef Stefan Postgraduate School. In 2000/2001 he spent one year as a visiting researcher at Leeds Metropolitan University in Leeds, UK. He has extensive research in modelling, simulation, and design of advanced telecommunications elements, systems, and services. His current work focuses on the advanced networking technologies for wireless systems and smart grids. He has participated in several national and international projects including COST projects. Recently, he was a technical/scientific coordinator of the FP7 SUNSEED project. He co-authored several books/book chapters and more than 80 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers. In 2004 he was awarded the Jožef Stefan Golden Emblem Prize for outstanding contributions made to science in Doctoral theses in the field of natural sciences in Slovenia. He is member of IEEE.



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