Physics-Aware LLM-Based Probabilistic Wind Power Scenario Generation under Extreme Icing Conditions
For power system operators, it improves uncertainty characterization under extreme weather, enabling better resilience planning.
The paper proposes a physics-aware LLM framework for probabilistic wind power scenario generation under extreme icing conditions, integrating SCADA-based physical modeling and a causal Transformer. Case studies show it reproduces icing-induced power degradation and temporal variability, enhancing resilience assessment.
Accurately characterizing wind power uncertainty under icing and post-disaster conditions remains a critical challenge for resilient power system operation. To address this issue, this paper proposes a physics-aware large language model (LLM) framework for probabilistic wind power scenario generation under extreme icing conditions. The proposed framework integrates supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA)-based physical modeling, multimodal tokenization, and a causal Transformer architecture trained in an autoregressive manner. A physics-aware decoding scheme effectively enforces rated power limits and ramping constraints on the generated trajectories while preserving stochastic diversity. Case studies using real wind turbine data show that the proposed method reproduces icing-induced power degradation and temporal variability observed during extreme weather. The resulting scenarios are physically consistent and high-fidelity, thereby significantly enhancing resilience assessment and recovery planning in renewable-integrated power systems.