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ECE 476

Renewable Energy Systems


Lecture 2: Power Industry History,
Review of Phasors

Prof. Tom Overbye


Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
overbye@illinois.edu
Announcements

• Please read Chapters 1 and 2


• HW 1 is 2.7, 16, 24, 33, 47; due Thursday 9/1
• Do the regular problems (not multiple choice)
• HW 1 will be turned in (for other homework we may
have an in-class quiz)
• For Problem 2.33 you need to use the PowerWorld
Software. You can download the software and cases at
the below link; get Version 19 (August 11, 2016)
www.powerworld.com/gloveroverbyesarma
History, cont’d – 1990’s & 2000’s

• Major opening of industry to competition occurred as


a result of National Energy Policy Act of 1992
• This act mandated that utilities provide
“nondiscriminatory” access to the high voltage
transmission
• Goal was to set up true competition in generation
• Result over the last few years has been a dramatic
restructuring of electric utility industry (for better or
worse!)
• Energy Bill 2005 repealed PUHCA; modified PURPA

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Electricity Prices, 1960-2010

Sources: EIA, Annual Energy Review, 2010, Figure 8.10; 2015, Fig 9
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Utility Restructuring

• Driven by significant regional variations in electric


rates
• Goal of competition is to reduce rates through the
introduction of competition
• Eventual goal is to allow consumers to choose their
electricity supplier

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State Variation in Electric Rates

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The Goal: Customer Choice

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The Result for California in 2000/1

OFF

OFF

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The California-Enron Effect

WA
MT ND VT ME
MN
OR NH
ID SD WI NY MA
WY MI RI

IA PA CT
NV NE NJ
IN OH DE
UT IL W MD
DC
CO VA VA
CA KS MO KY
AZ TN NC
OK
NM AR SC
MS AL GA
TX
LA
AK
FL
HI

electricity delayed suspended


no activity
restructuring restructuring restructuring
Source : http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/chg_str/regmap.html
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The Rise of Natural Gas

Source: US EIA, 2011


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August 14th, 2003 Blackout

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My Favorite Blackout Hoax Photo
My Favorite 8/14/2003 Blackout
Cartoon!

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The Smart Grid

• The term “Smart Grid” dates officially to the 2007


“Energy Independence and Security Act”, Title 13
(“Smart Grid”)
• Use of digital information and control techniques
• Dynamic grid optimization with cyber-security
• Deployment of distributed resources including
• Customer participation and smart appliances
• Integration of storage including PHEVs
• Development of interoperability standards

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Smart Grid Perceptions (Some of
Us Like the Term “Smarter”)

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Renewable Portfolio Standards
(September 2012)

Source: http://www.dsireusa.org/
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In the News: First US Offshore
Wind is Complete
• US wind has grown rapidly, but none has been offshore
• First offshore wind, Block Island Wind Farm, is now
complete and should be generating in October 2016
– It has five 6 MW GE
direct drive wind
turbines (30 MW total)
– Located three miles
southeast of Block Island,
Rhode Island
– Connected to grid by
underwater 34.5 kV
three-phase cables
Image source: New York Times, Aug 22, 2016
North America Electric Load and
Generation
Power System Modeling and Time
Frames
• Much of class covers power system models. An
important quote to keep in mind is
– “Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are useful.
However, the approximate nature of the model must always
be borne in mind.” G.E.P. Box, N.R. Draper, Empirical
Model-Building and Response Surfaces, Wiley, 1987, p. 424.
• Power systems covers
many different time
frames, with essentially
no models valid for
all of them
Image: Sauer, P.W., M. A. Pai, Power System Dynamics and Stability, Stripes Publishing, 2007
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Review of Phasors

Goal of phasor analysis is to simplify the analysis of


constant frequency ac systems

v(t) = Vmax cos(wt + qv)


i(t) = Imax cos(wt + qI)

Root Mean Square (RMS) voltage of sinusoid

1T Vmax
 v(t ) dt 
2
T0 2

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Phasor Representation

Euler's Identity: e jq  cosq  j sin q

Phasor notation is developed by rewriting


using Euler's identity
v(t )  2 V cos(w t  qV )
v(t )  2 V Re e j (w t qV ) 
(Note: V is the RMS voltage)

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Phasor Representation, cont’d
The RMS, cosine-referenced voltage phasor is:
V  V e jqV  V qV
v(t )  Re 2 Ve jw t e jqV
V  V cosqV  j V sin qV
I  I cosq I  j I sin q I
(Note: Some texts use “boldface” type for
complex numbers, or “bars on the top”)

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Advantages of Phasor Analysis
Device Time Analysis Phasor
Resistor v(t )  Ri (t ) V  RI
di (t )
Inductor v(t )  L V  jw LI
dt
1t 1
Capacitor 
C0
i (t ) dt  v(0) V 
jw C
I

Z = Impedance  R  jX  Z 
R = Resistance
X = Reactance (Note: Z is a
X complex number but
Z = R2  X 2  =arctan( )
R not a phasor)

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RL Circuit Example

V (t )  2 100cos(w t  30)
f  60Hz
R  4 X  wL  3
Z  42  32  5   36.9
V 10030
I  
Z 536.9
 20  6.9 Amps
i(t)  20 2 cos(w t  6.9)

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Complex Power
Power
p(t )  v(t ) i (t )
v(t) = Vmax cos(w t  qV )
i (t) = I max cos(w t  q I )
1
cos cos   [cos(   )  cos(   )]
2
1
p(t )  Vmax I max [cos(qV  q I ) 
2
cos(2w t  qV  q I )]

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Complex Power, cont’d
Average Power
1
p (t )  Vmax I max [cos(qV  q I )  cos(2wt  qV  q I )]
2
T
1
Pavg 
T0 p (t )dt

1
 Vmax I max cos(qV  q I )
2
 V I cos(qV  q I )

Power Factor Angle =  =qV  q I

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Complex Power

S  V I  cos(qV  q I )  j sin(qV  q I ) 
 P  jQ (Note: S is a complex number but not a phasor)

 V I*
P = Real Power (W, kW, MW)
Q = Reactive Power (var, kvar, Mvar)
S = Complex power (VA, kVA, MVA)
Power Factor (pf) = cos
If current leads voltage then pf is leading
If current lags voltage then pf is lagging
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Complex Power, cont’d

Relationships between real, reactive and complex power


P  S cos 

Q  S sin    S 1  pf 2

Example: A load draws 100 kW with a leading pf of 0.85.


What are  (power factor angle), Q and S ?
  -cos 1 0.85  31.8
100kW
S   117.6 kVA
0.85
Q  117.6sin(31.8)  62.0 kVar
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Conservation of Power

• At every node (bus) in the system


– Sum of real power into node must equal zero
– Sum of reactive power into node must equal zero
• This is a direct consequence of Kirchhoff’s current
law, which states that the total current into each
node must equal zero.
– Conservation of power follows since S = VI*

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Conversation of Power Example

Earlier we found
I = 20-6.9 amps

S  V I *  10030  206.9  200036.9 VA


  36.9 pf = 0.8 lagging
SR  VR I *  4  20  6.9 206.9
2
PR  1600W  I R (Q R  0)
SL  VL I *  3 j  20  6.9 206.9
2
Q L  1200 var  I X (PL  0)
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