Abstract
An important aspect of bulk power supply planning is the determination of system adequacy. Adequacy may be defined as the system's capability to meet system demand within major component ratings and in the presence of scheduled and unscheduled outages of generation and transmission components or facilities. A comparison of two bulk power supply adequacy assessment techniques is performed. The linear programming technique based on a dc load flow network model is compared with the more specialized network flow (max-flow/min-cut) technique which is based upon a transportation model for the network. Several bulk power supply adequacy indices are evaluated by each method and compared for a representative power network.
Original language | English (US) |
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Title of host publication | Unknown Host Publication Title |
Publisher | IEEE |
State | Published - 1978 |
Event | Pap $-$ IEEE PES (Power Eng Soc) Winter Meet, Prepr - New York City, NY, USA Duration: Jan 29 1978 → Feb 3 1978 |
Other
Other | Pap $-$ IEEE PES (Power Eng Soc) Winter Meet, Prepr |
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City | New York City, NY, USA |
Period | 1/29/78 → 2/3/78 |