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Vulnerability of Power Grid Centers on
Key Junctions
2 September 2004-- Vulnerabilities
inadvertently built into the U.S. power grid, which is one of the
most complex systems ever constructed, have been identified by a
research team lead by Reka Albert, assistant
professor of physics at Penn State. The team's topological analysis
of the grid structure reveals that, although the system has been
designed to withstand the random loss of generators or substations,
its integrity may depend on protecting a few key elements.
"Our analysis indicates that major disruption can result from
loss of as few as two percent of the grid's substations," says
Albert, whose research team includes Istvan Albert,
research associate in the Bioinformatics Consulting Center at Penn
State, and Gary L. Nakarado at the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory. One implication of the research is that identification
of strategic points in the grid system can enhance defense against
interruptions, whether by equipment failure, natural disasters, or
human activity. Major blackouts caused by failures in the grid, such
as the one that affected the northeastern part of the country during
the summer of 2003, incur tremendous economic, public-health, and
security risks.
The study, titled "Structural Vulnerability of the North American
Power Grid," was published in a recent issue of the journal
Physical Review E. The researchers constructed a model of
the entire transmission grid with over 14,000 "nodes," including
generators, transmission substations, and distribution substations,
and over 19,000 "edges," corresponding to the high-voltage
transmission lines that carry power between the nodes. They measured
the importance of each substation node based on its "load," or the
number of shortest paths between other nodes that pass through it.
"While 40 percent of the nodes had a load below one thousand, the
analysis identified 1 percent of the nodes—approximately 140—that
have a load higher than one million," Albert says.
This high degree of connectiveness in the grid system allows
power to be transmitted over long distances, but it also allows
local disturbances to propagate across the grid. "There are systems
to protect the nodes from overload, such as a controlled shutdown to
take a substation out if it overloads or to shut off a generator. In
general, these systems do a good job of protecting the nodes," says
Reka Albert. "What this model really looks at is the effect of
losing a number of nodes in a short period." If the nodes are
removed randomly, the effect on the system is roughly proportional
to the number of generators or substations removed. However, the
grid quickly becomes disconnected when the high-load transmission
substations are selectively removed from the system—if the nodes
that have the highest load are removed first, followed progressively
by the nodes with successively lower loads. According to the model,
a loss of only 4 percent of the 10,287 transmission substations
results in a 60 percent loss of connectivity. During a cascading
failure, in which the high-load substations fail in sequence, the
model shows that the loss of only 2 percent of the nodes causes a
catastrophic failure of the entire system.
The authors point out that this vulnerability is an inherent part
of the existing system. If the power grid were highly redundant,
however, the loss of a small number of nodes should not cause power
loss because the system reroutes through alternative paths. Possible
remediation schemes include increased redundancy focused on key
substations and transmission lines, or more distributed generation,
which would decrease the load on these key points. "Future additions
to the system should consider the effect of the new nodes on
relieving strain on key nodes," Albert says. "From this model, we
know how defects can propagate through the system, we have
identified parts of the system that need to be improved because they
are not redundant, and we can show which substations need to be
protected from failure in order to avoid widespread system failure.
These are considerations that could help guide energy policy
decisions."
This research was funded, in part, by the Midwest Research
Institute.
[ S M / B K K ]
Contacts: Reka Albert: (+1) 814-865-6123, rza1@psu.edu Barbara K. Kennedy
(PIO): (+1) 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu |