PES Seminar: Application of Power System Voltage Stability Concepts
Voltage stability is very important to power systems, while fewer and fewer lessons are given regarding this area. This seminar is especially provided in order to fill the gap. It will be given by Mr. Michael Richardson from AEP. 1.0 hour of PDH/CPD credit will be provided to attendees as needed.
Abstract: The power flow on an AC transmission line can be impacted by thermal, voltage magnitude, voltage-drop, and steady-state stability limitations. This seminar deals with the steady-state voltage limitations and using phase angles as a proxy. Existing real time tools in the control room address the thermal, voltage magnitude, and voltage drop limitations. Note that voltage stability is related to phase angles. In addition, the power component of a traditional PV curve is associated with phase angles across a circuit.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
- Date: 26 Nov 2019
- Time: 10:30 PM UTC to 12:00 AM UTC
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- 700 Morrison Road
- Gahanna, Ohio
- United States 43230
- Building: AEP Ohio
- Room Number: Conference Center 1A
Speakers
Mike Richardshon
Biography:
Michael R Richardson, PE is currently working as a Staff Engineer at American Electric Power (AEP) Transmission Operations. Mike has worked at AEP for 42 years, in distribution, environmental, and transitioning to transmission all in engineering roles. He has served on the NERC system restoration standard drafting team and has his NERC certification. He is a member of IEEE, the Power Engineering Society, and CIGRE. Mike has co-authored a paper on voltage security and authored two papers on the application of a voltage stability triangle. He is a registered professional engineer in Ohio and has a BSEE from Ohio State University.
Agenda
5:30 - 6:00 pm: Arrivals, Food & Networking
6:00 - 7:00 pm: Presentation and Q&A