Wind and Structures
Volume 39, Number 1, 2024, pages 1-14
DOI: 10.12989/was.2024.39.1.001
Integrating physics-based fragility for hierarchical spectral clustering for resilience assessment of power distribution systems under extreme winds
Jintao Zhang, Wei Zhang, William Hughes and Amvrossios C. Bagtzoglou
Abstract
Widespread damages from extreme winds have attracted lots of attentions of the resilience assessment of power
distribution systems. With many related environmental parameters as well as numerous power infrastructure components, such
as poles and wires, the increased challenge of power asset management before, during and after extreme events have to be
addressed to prevent possible cascading failures in the power distribution system. Many extreme winds from weather events,
such as hurricanes, generate widespread damages in multiple areas such as the economy, social security, and infrastructure
management. The livelihoods of residents in the impaired areas are devastated largely due to the paucity of vital utilities, such as
electricity. To address the challenge of power grid asset management, power system clustering is needed to partition a complex
power system into several stable clusters to prevent the cascading failure from happening. Traditionally, system clustering uses
the Binary Decision Diagram (BDD) to derive the clustering result, which is time-consuming and inefficient. Meanwhile, the
previous studies considering the weather hazards did not include any detailed weather-related meteorologic parameters which is
not appropriate as the heterogeneity of the parameters could largely affect the system performance. Therefore, a fragility-based
network hierarchical spectral clustering method is proposed. In the present paper, the fragility curve and surfaces for a power
distribution subsystem are obtained first. The fragility of the subsystem under typical failure mechanisms is calculated as a
function of wind speed and pole characteristic dimension (diameter or span length). Secondly, the proposed fragility-based
hierarchical spectral clustering method (F-HSC) integrates the physics-based fragility analysis into Hierarchical Spectral
Clustering (HSC) technique from graph theory to achieve the clustering result for the power distribution system under extreme
weather events. From the results of vulnerability analysis, it could be seen that the system performance after clustering is better
than before clustering. With the F-HSC method, the impact of the extreme weather events could be considered with topology to
cluster different power distribution systems to prevent the system from experiencing power blackouts.
Key Words
fragility curve; hierarchical spectral clustering; hurricane hazard; power distribution system; reliability model
Address
Jintao Zhang, Wei Zhang, William Hughes and Amvrossios C. Bagtzoglou: Department of Civil Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269, U.S.A.