Alaa Selim

h-index49
2papers

2 Papers

SPAug 16, 2024
A Novel Approach to Classify Power Quality Signals Using Vision Transformers

Ahmad Mohammad Saber, Alaa Selim, Mohamed M. Hammad et al.

With the rapid integration of electronically interfaced renewable energy resources and loads into smart grids, there is increasing interest in power quality disturbances (PQD) classification to enhance the security and efficiency of these grids. This paper introduces a new approach to PQD classification based on the Vision Transformer (ViT) model. When a PQD occurs, the proposed approach first converts the power quality signal into an image and then utilizes a pre-trained ViT to accurately determine the class of the PQD. Unlike most previous works, which were limited to a few disturbance classes or small datasets, the proposed method is trained and tested on a large dataset with 17 disturbance classes. Our experimental results show that the proposed ViT-based approach achieves PQD classification precision and recall of 98.28% and 97.98%, respectively, outperforming recently proposed techniques applied to the same dataset.

LGFeb 24, 2024
Scalable Volt-VAR Optimization using RLlib-IMPALA Framework: A Reinforcement Learning Approach

Alaa Selim, Yanzhu Ye, Junbo Zhao et al.

In the rapidly evolving domain of electrical power systems, the Volt-VAR optimization (VVO) is increasingly critical, especially with the burgeoning integration of renewable energy sources. Traditional approaches to learning-based VVO in expansive and dynamically changing power systems are often hindered by computational complexities. To address this challenge, our research presents a novel framework that harnesses the potential of Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL), specifically utilizing the Importance Weighted Actor-Learner Architecture (IMPALA) algorithm, executed on the RAY platform. This framework, built upon RLlib-an industry-standard in Reinforcement Learning-ingeniously capitalizes on the distributed computing capabilities and advanced hyperparameter tuning offered by RAY. This design significantly expedites the exploration and exploitation phases in the VVO solution space. Our empirical results demonstrate that our approach not only surpasses existing DRL methods in achieving superior reward outcomes but also manifests a remarkable tenfold reduction in computational requirements. The integration of our DRL agent with the RAY platform facilitates the creation of RLlib-IMPALA, a novel framework that efficiently uses RAY's resources to improve system adaptability and control. RLlib-IMPALA leverages RAY's toolkit to enhance analytical capabilities and significantly speeds up training to become more than 10 times faster than other state-of-the-art DRL methods.