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contributor authorWilliam Hughes
contributor authorSita Nyame
contributor authorWilliam Taylor
contributor authorAaron Spaulding
contributor authorMingguo Hong
contributor authorXiaochuan Luo
contributor authorSlava Maslennikov
contributor authorDiego Cerrai
contributor authorEmmanouil Anagnostou
contributor authorWei Zhang
date accessioned2024-04-27T22:40:39Z
date available2024-04-27T22:40:39Z
date issued2024/06/01
identifier other10.1061-AJRUA6.RUENG-1171.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4297234
description abstractTo predict power outages for upcoming storm events and assess the resilience of power systems, accurate models of power outage probabilities are necessary. Although physics-based fragility models have been developed to forecast structural failure probabilities under strong winds, such methods may capture limited failure modes and could struggle to predict more-random outages that are not directly related to strong winds. Data-driven machine learning methods have emerged for power outage predictions considering multiple failure modes, although they may struggle to predict cases with limited data, such as extreme events. To integrate the two different approaches, a novel model is proposed to probabilistically combine physics-based and machine-learning predictions. Fragility analyses of various transmission structure types and tree species subject to wind loads were conducted for the prediction of wind-induced structural damages. An extreme gradient boosting (XGboost) machine learning model trained on infrastructure, weather, topographic, and vegetation characteristics is used for the prediction of nonstructural outage probabilities. The framework is demonstrated through a case study of the overhead transmission system in the New England region of the US over 44 storm events from 2015 to 2020. The results show an improved agreement between predicted and observed outages, as well as correlations between predicted probability and observed outage rate, highlighting the model’s effectiveness for estimations of storm impacts and grid vulnerability.
publisherASCE
titleA Probabilistic Method for Integrating Physics-Based and Data-Driven Storm Outage Prediction Models for Power Systems
typeJournal Article
journal volume10
journal issue2
journal titleASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems, Part A: Civil Engineering
identifier doi10.1061/AJRUA6.RUENG-1171
journal fristpage04024021-1
journal lastpage04024021-14
page14
treeASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems, Part A: Civil Engineering:;2024:;Volume ( 010 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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