SYFeb 27, 2020
Graphical Models in Meshed Distribution Grids: Topology estimation, change detection and limitationsDeepjyoti Deka, Saurav Talukdar, Michael Chertkov et al.
Graphical models are a succinct way to represent the structure in probability distributions. This article analyzes the graphical model of nodal voltages in non-radial power distribution grids. Using algebraic and structural properties of graphical models, algorithms exactly determining topology and detecting line changes for distribution grids are presented along with their theoretical limitations. We show that if distribution grids have cycles/loops of size greater than three, then nodal voltages are sufficient for efficient topology estimation without additional assumptions on system parameters. In contrast, line failure or change detection using nodal voltages does not require any structural assumption. Under noisy measurements, we provide the first non-trivial bounds on the maximum noise that the system can tolerate for asymptotically correct topology recovery. The performance of the designed algorithms is validated with nonlinear AC power flow samples generated by Matpower on test grids, including scenarios with injection correlations and system noise.
SYJul 12, 2018
Topology Learning of Radial Dynamical Systems with Latent NodesSaurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka, Michael Chertkov et al.
In this article, we present a method to reconstruct the topology of a partially observed radial network of linear dynamical systems with bi-directional interactions. Our approach exploits the structure of the inverse power spectral density matrix and recovers edges involving nodes up to four hops away in the underlying topology. We then present an algorithm with provable guarantees, which eliminates the spurious links obtained and also identifies the location of the unobserved nodes in the inferred topology. The algorithm recovers the exact topology of the network by using only time-series of the states at the observed nodes. The effectiveness of the method developed is demonstrated by applying it on a typical distribution system of the electric grid.
SYSep 19, 2019
Exact Topology Learning in a Network of Cyclostationary ProcessesHarish Doddi, Saurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka et al.
Learning the structure of a network from time series data, in particular cyclostationary data, is of significant interest in many disciplines such as power grids, biology and finance. In this article, an algorithm is presented for reconstruction of the topology of a network of cyclostationary processes. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to guarantee exact recovery without any assumptions on the underlying structure. The method is based on a lifting technique by which cyclostationary processes are mapped to vector wide sense stationary processes and further on semi-definite properties of matrix Wiener filters for the said processes.We demonstrate the performance of the proposed algorithm on a Resistor-Capacitor network and present the accuracy of reconstruction for varying sample sizes.
LGOct 2, 2021
Efficient and passive learning of networked dynamical systems driven by non-white exogenous inputsHarish Doddi, Deepjyoti Deka, Saurav Talukdar et al.
We consider a networked linear dynamical system with $p$ agents/nodes. We study the problem of learning the underlying graph of interactions/dependencies from observations of the nodal trajectories over a time-interval $T$. We present a regularized non-casual consistent estimator for this problem and analyze its sample complexity over two regimes: (a) where the interval $T$ consists of $n$ i.i.d. observation windows of length $T/n$ (restart and record), and (b) where $T$ is one continuous observation window (consecutive). Using the theory of $M$-estimators, we show that the estimator recovers the underlying interactions, in either regime, in a time-interval that is logarithmic in the system size $p$. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to analyze the sample complexity of learning linear dynamical systems \emph{driven by unobserved not-white wide-sense stationary (WSS) inputs}.
DCMar 22, 2021
Power Modeling for Effective Datacenter Planning and Compute ManagementAna Radovanovic, Bokan Chen, Saurav Talukdar et al.
Datacenter power demand has been continuously growing and is the key driver of its cost. An accurate mapping of compute resources (CPU, RAM, etc.) and hardware types (servers, accelerators, etc.) to power consumption has emerged as a critical requirement for major Web and cloud service providers. With the global growth in datacenter capacity and associated power consumption, such models are essential for important decisions around datacenter design and operation. In this paper, we discuss two classes of statistical power models designed and validated to be accurate, simple, interpretable and applicable to all hardware configurations and workloads across hyperscale datacenters of Google fleet. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest scale power modeling study of this kind, in both the scope of diverse datacenter planning and real-time management use cases, as well as the variety of hardware configurations and workload types used for modeling and validation. We demonstrate that the proposed statistical modeling techniques, while simple and scalable, predict power with less than 5% Mean Absolute Percent Error (MAPE) for more than 95% diverse Power Distribution Units (more than 2000) using only 4 features. This performance matches the reported accuracy of the previous started-of-the-art methods, while using significantly less features and covering a wider range of use cases.
SYSep 27, 2018
Physics Informed Topology Learning in Networks of Linear Dynamical SystemsSaurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka, Harish Doddi et al.
Learning influence pathways of a network of dynamically related processes from observations is of considerable importance in many disciplines. In this article, influence networks of agents which interact dynamically via linear dependencies are considered. An algorithm for the reconstruction of the topology of interaction based on multivariate Wiener filtering is analyzed. It is shown that for a vast and important class of interactions, that respect flow conservation, the topology of the interactions can be exactly recovered. The class of problems where reconstruction is guaranteed to be exact includes power distribution networks, dynamic thermal networks and consensus networks. The efficacy of the approach is illustrated through simulation and experiments on consensus networks, IEEE power distribution networks and thermal dynamics of buildings.
SYOct 17, 2018
Data-driven identification of a thermal network in multi-zone buildingHarish Doddi, Saurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka et al.
System identification of smart buildings is necessary for their optimal control and application in demand response. The thermal response of a building around an operating point can be modeled using a network of interconnected resistors with capacitors at each node/zone called RC network. The development of the RC network involves two phases: obtaining the network topology, and estimating thermal resistances and capacitance's. In this article, we present a provable method to reconstruct the interaction topology of thermal zones of a building solely from temperature measurements. We demonstrate that our learning algorithm accurately reconstructs the interaction topology for a $5$ zone office building in EnergyPlus with real-world conditions. We show that our learning algorithm is able to recover the network structure in scenarios where prior research prove insufficient.
SYSep 29, 2017
Learning the Exact Topology of Undirected Consensus NetworksSaurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka, Sandeep Attree et al.
In this article, we present a method to learn the interaction topology of a network of agents undergoing linear consensus updates in a non invasive manner. Our approach is based on multivariate Wiener filtering, which is known to recover spurious edges apart from the true edges in the topology. The main contribution of this work is to show that in the case of undirected consensus networks, all spurious links obtained using Wiener filtering can be identified using frequency response of the Wiener filters. Thus, the exact interaction topology of the agents is unveiled. The method presented requires time series measurements of the state of the agents and does not require any knowledge of link weights. To the best of our knowledge this is the first approach that provably reconstructs the structure of undirected consensus networks with correlated noise. We illustrate the effectiveness of the method developed through numerical simulations as well as experiments on a five node network of Raspberry Pis.
OCJul 5, 2017
Topology Estimation in Bulk Power Grids: Guarantees on Exact RecoveryDeepjyoti Deka, Saurav Talukdar, Michael Chertkov et al.
The topology of a power grid affects its dynamic operation and settlement in the electricity market. Real-time topology identification can enable faster control action following an emergency scenario like failure of a line. This article discusses a graphical model framework for topology estimation in bulk power grids (both loopy transmission and radial distribution) using measurements of voltage collected from the grid nodes. The graphical model for the probability distribution of nodal voltages in linear power flow models is shown to include additional edges along with the operational edges in the true grid. Our proposed estimation algorithms first learn the graphical model and subsequently extract the operational edges using either thresholding or a neighborhood counting scheme. For grid topologies containing no three-node cycles (two buses do not share a common neighbor), we prove that an exact extraction of the operational topology is theoretically guaranteed. This includes a majority of distribution grids that have radial topologies. For grids that include cycles of length three, we provide sufficient conditions that ensure existence of algorithms for exact reconstruction. In particular, for grids with constant impedance per unit length and uniform injection covariances, this observation leads to conditions on geographical placement of the buses. The performance of algorithms is demonstrated in test case simulations.
SYAug 21, 2017
Distributed Apportioning in a Power Network for providing Demand Response ServicesSourav Patel, Sandeep Attree, Saurav Talukdar et al.
Greater penetration of Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) in power networks requires coordination strategies that allow for self-adjustment of contributions in a network of DERs, owing to variability in generation and demand. In this article, a distributed scheme is proposed that enables a DER in a network to arrive at viable power reference commands that satisfies the DERs local constraints on its generation and loads it has to service, while, the aggregated behavior of multiple DERs in the network and their respective loads meet the ancillary services demanded by the grid. The Net-load Management system for a single unit is referred to as the Local Inverter System (LIS) in this article . A distinguishing feature of the proposed consensus based solution is the distributed finite time termination of the algorithm that allows each LIS unit in the network to determine power reference commands in the presence of communication delays in a distributed manner. The proposed scheme allows prioritization of Renewable Energy Sources (RES) in the network and also enables auto-adjustment of contributions from LIS units with lower priority resources (non-RES). The methods are validated using hardware-in-the-loop simulations with Raspberry PI devices as distributed control units, implementing the proposed distributed algorithm and responsible for determining and dispatching realtime power reference commands to simulated power electronics interface emulating LIS units for demand response.
LGMar 2, 2017
Exact Topology Reconstruction of Radial Dynamical Systems with Applications to Distribution System of the Power GridSaurav Talukdar, Deepjyoti Deka, Donatello Materassi et al.
In this article we present a method to reconstruct the interconnectedness of dynamically related stochastic processes, where the interactions are bi-directional and the underlying topology is a tree. Our approach is based on multivariate Wiener filtering which recovers spurious edges apart from the true edges in the topology reconstruction. The main contribution of this work is to show that all spurious links obtained using Wiener filtering can be eliminated if the underlying topology is a tree based on which we present a three stage network reconstruction procedure for trees. We illustrate the effectiveness of the method developed by applying it on a typical distribution system of the electric grid.