CRApr 20, 2014

Using Covert Topological Information for Defense Against Malicious Attacks on DC State Estimation

arXiv:1404.5029v166 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities in power grid operations for utility operators, though it is incremental as it builds on existing defense strategies.

The paper tackles the problem of defending against coordinated false-data injection attacks on power system state estimation by using covert topological information, such as hiding the exact reactance of transmission lines, to prevent attacks from compromising state variables, and verifies the approach in IEEE test cases.

Accurate state estimation is of paramount importance to maintain the power system operating in a secure and efficient state. The recently identified coordinated data injection attacks to meter measurements can bypass the current security system and introduce errors to the state estimates. The conventional wisdom to mitigate such attacks is by securing meter measurements to evade malicious injections. In this paper, we provide a novel alternative to defend against false-data injection attacks using covert power network topological information. By keeping the exact reactance of a set of transmission lines from attackers, no false data injection attack can be launched to compromise any set of state variables. We first investigate from the attackers' perspective the necessary condition to perform injection attack. Based on the arguments, we characterize the optimal protection problem, which protects the state variables with minimum cost, as a well-studied Steiner tree problem in a graph. Besides, we also propose a mixed defending strategy that jointly considers the use of covert topological information and secure meter measurements when either method alone is costly or unable to achieve the protection objective. A mixed integer linear programming (MILP) formulation is introduced to obtain the optimal mixed defending strategy. To tackle the NP-hardness of the problem, a tree pruning-based heuristic is further presented to produce an approximate solution in polynomial time. The advantageous performance of the proposed defending mechanisms is verified in IEEE standard power system testcases.

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