SYSYMay 16

Replicating Real-World 23-Hz Oscillations Caused by Large Electronic Loads

arXiv:2605.1719065.1
Predicted impact top 1% in SY · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

For power system operators, this provides a validated method to understand and predict low-frequency oscillations from large electronic loads, though it is an incremental application of existing simulation techniques.

This paper analyzes and reproduces 23-Hz oscillations observed in Texas power grids caused by large electronic loads, using frequency-domain analysis and EMT simulations that closely match real fault recorder data.

In 2024, Texas operators observed 23-Hz oscillations in real power measurements close to a large electronic load (LEL). Oscillations emerged when the load's power consumption reached approximately 320 MW level and subsided as the active power demand decreased. The paper aims to analyze the event and reproduce the oscillations using electromagnetic transient (EMT) simulations. In the first stage, a representative feedback system is developed, and frequency-domain analysis is conducted to examine the phenomenon and identify its key influencing factors. Next, detailed EMT simulations are performed to further validate the proposed analytical approach. The results show that the feedback system effectively captures and characterizes the critical features of the 23-Hz oscillation incident. In addition, the EMT simulations successfully reproduce the real-world event, with the simulated results closely matching the fault recorder data.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes