1] Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, PO Box 60 12 03, Potsdam 14412, Germany [2] Department of Physics, Humboldt University of Berlin, Newtonstrasse 15, Berlin 12489, Germany.
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, PO Box 60 12 03, Potsdam 14412, Germany.
Nat Commun. 2014 Jun 9;5:3969. doi: 10.1038/ncomms4969.
The cheapest and thus widespread way to add new generators to a high-voltage power grid is by a simple tree-like connection scheme. However, it is not entirely clear how such locally cost-minimizing connection schemes affect overall system performance, in particular the stability against blackouts. Here we investigate how local patterns in the network topology influence a power grid's ability to withstand blackout-prone large perturbations. Employing basin stability, a nonlinear concept, we find in numerical simulations of artificially generated power grids that tree-like connection schemes--so-called dead ends and dead trees--strongly diminish stability. A case study of the Northern European power system confirms this result and demonstrates that the inverse is also true: repairing dead ends by addition of a few transmission lines substantially enhances stability. This may indicate a topological design principle for future power grids: avoid dead ends.
将新的发电机添加到高压电网的最便宜且因此广泛采用的方法是通过简单的树状连接方案。然而,尚不完全清楚这种局部成本最小化的连接方案如何影响整体系统性能,特别是针对停电的稳定性。在这里,我们研究了网络拓扑中的局部模式如何影响电网承受易停电大干扰的能力。通过采用非线性概念的盆地稳定性,我们在人为生成的电力网格的数值模拟中发现,树状连接方案(即所谓的死胡同和死树)会严重降低稳定性。对北欧电力系统的案例研究证实了这一结果,并表明反之亦然:通过添加少量输电线路来修复死胡同可以大大提高稳定性。这可能表明未来电网的拓扑设计原则:避免死胡同。