SOC-PHLGSYMay 17, 2021

Power-grid stability predictions using transferable machine learning

arXiv:2105.07562v320 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses power-grid stability prediction for energy systems, but it is incremental as it applies existing methods to new data.

The study tackled predicting power-grid synchronization stability by testing three machine learning algorithms on synthetic grids, finding better performance with heterogeneous input-power distribution, and demonstrated transferability to real-world grids in Great Britain, Spain, France, and Germany.

Complex network analyses have provided clues to improve power-grid stability with the help of numerical models. The high computational cost of numerical simulations, however, has inhibited the approach, especially when it deals with the dynamic properties of power grids such as frequency synchronization. In this study, we investigate machine learning techniques to estimate the stability of power-grid synchronization. We test three different machine learning algorithms -- random forest, support vector machine, and artificial neural network -- training them with two different types of synthetic power grids consisting of homogeneous and heterogeneous input-power distribution, respectively. We find that the three machine learning models better predict the synchronization stability of power-grid nodes when they are trained with the heterogeneous input-power distribution than the homogeneous one. With the real-world power grids of Great Britain, Spain, France, and Germany, we also demonstrate that the machine learning algorithms trained on synthetic power grids are transferable to the stability prediction of the real-world power grids, which implies the prospective applicability of machine learning techniques on power-grid studies.

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