Power Systems Analysis (EE 30372)

University of Notre Dame


Spring 2017 - Enroll in EE30372 section 01
DBRT 244 - MWF - 12:50 AM - 1:40 PM

Course Vault


Description: The objective of this course is to provide students with an overview of interconnected 3-phase power system operation. The student will learn how to model the basic components of such systems; transmission lines, transformers, generators, and loads. The student will learn about power flow analysis and its role in economic dispatch and generation control. Additional topics include transient stability and short circuit protection.

Topics

  • History of Power Grid, Fundamental Concepts, One-line Diagrams
  • Three phase systems, per-phase analysis, Transformers
  • Per-unit analysis, three phase transformers, Transformer Models
  • Transmission Line Parameters and Modeling

  • Bus Admittance Matrix, Solving Nodal Equations, Network Reduction
  • Power Balance and Power Flow Analysis
  • PowerWorld tool, Contingency and Decoupled Analysis, Control of Power Flows
  • Economic Dispatch, Optimal Power Flow, Wholesale Electricity Markets

  • Symmetrical Fault Analysis
  • Symmetrical Components
  • Unsymmetrical Fault Analysis
  • Transient Stability

Grading: Homework 30% - Midterm Exams (2) 40% - Final Exam 30%
Instructor: Michael Lemmon, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Fitzpatrick 264, lemmon at nd.edu
Textbook: Power System Analysis and Design, Sixth Edition, J. Duncan Glover, M.S. Sarma, and T. Overbye, 2016, Cengage Learning

Additional References:
  1. Power System Analysis, J. Grainger and W. Stevenson Jr, 1994, McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0070612935