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Paper Title (Use Style: Paper Title) : Subtitle As Needed (Paper Subtitle)
I. INTRODUCTION (HEADING 1)
to zero ,the real power losses in the system would also be zero,
but a distribution system operated in this state would
obviously cause the utility company to lose customers.
So it is necessary to specify which states are feasible and whic
h ones are not.
1) Topological constraints:The Topology or layout
of the system is constrained to be the radial configuration
which is typical in power distribution networks. This means
that no loops are allowed in the network. The network
configuration is also constrained to be a connected topology
such that each bus is connected via at least one path to the
substation. The combination of these two requirments
classifies the feasible topology as a spanning tree. Fig. 1 shows
a typical feasible radial configuration of a distribution system
with a main feeder and 7 laterals.
2) Electrical Constraints: Being an Electrical circuit,
the state of a power system network must also satisfy
Kirchhoffs voltage and current laws. Since a distribution sys
tem can be quite large involving thousands of buses , the
formulation of these constraints can be rather involved. They
can be expressed as the equality constraint, f(v, x) ,given
in (2).
3) Operational constraints: It is possible that the
network configuration which is theoritically minimizes the
the real power losses in the system might require
one or several of the components in the system to be operated
at a level beyond its physical limitations. This obviously must
be disallowed. Each lin, transformer and switch in the system
has a certain thermal limitation which restricts the maximum
allowable current through that component. In general, thes
e physical limitations can be accounted for by constraining
line
currents,
line
flows
and
bus voltages to lie within appropriate bounds. These operation
al constraints are inequality constraints which can be included
in (2).
4) Load
constraints:
The
power
companys
customers have certain requirements for the electrical power
they receive. The power company must be able to maintain a
certain voltage level at each bus in the system while
supplying
power
demanded
by
each
customer. This inequality constraint is given by
|min Vi| |Vi | |maxVi|
(3)
is also included in the inequality constraint (2), namely,
G(xu) 0
.
(3)
where, Pli represent the real power lost in line i, (n-1)
represents total number of lines and n represents total number
of buses.Then our objective function will be
min f (v, x) for u s.
C. Constraints
Not every configuration u s is a reasonable solution to the
network configuration problem. For example if all of the
switches were put in the open state and all bus voltages set
ab
to
mean
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