Abstract-An analytic approximation for the critical clearing time (CCT) metric is derived from direct methods for power system stability. The formula has been designed to incorporate as many features of transient stability analysis as possible such as different fault locations and different post-fault network states. The purpose of this metric is to analyse trends in stability (in terms of CCT) of power systems under the variation of a system parameter. The performance of this metric to measure stability trends is demonstrated on an aggregated power network, the so-called two machine infinite bus network, by varying load parameters in the full bus admittance matrix using numerical continuation. The metric is compared to two other expressions for the CCT which incorporate additional non-linearities present in the model.
A mathematical model is developed to describe the action of a novel form of fluidic biosensor that uses paramagnetic particles that have been pre-coated with target-specific antibodies. In an initial phase the particles are introduced to a sample solution containing the target which then binds to the particles via antigen-antibody reactions. During the test phase a magnet is used to draw the paramagnetic particles to the sensor surface which is similarly coated with specific antibodies. During this process, cross-links are formed by the antigens thereby binding the paramagnetic particles to the sensor surface. After the magnetic field is removed, a voltage change across an inductor below the sensor surface is recorded, which is deemed to depend on the number of magnetic particles that have been bound to the sensor surface. The fundamental question addressed is to explain the range of experimentally observed dose-response curves, and how this depends on the various parameters of the problem. In particular, observations have shown both rising and falling dose-reponse curves, as well as 'hooked' dose-response curves possessing local maxima. Initially a particle-dynamics computational model is produced to determine the time scales of the key processes involved, but is shown to be unable to produce differently shaped dose-response curves. The computational model suggests spatio-temporal effects are unimportant, therefore a homogenized rate-equation model is developed for each of the key phases of the immunoassay process. Binding rates are shown to depend on various geometric factors related to the diameter of the paramagnetic particles and the size of the sensor surface. The dose-response is shown to depend crucially on various saturation effects during each phase, and conditions can be derived, in some cases analytically, for each of the three qualitatively different curve types. Furthermore, non-dimensionalization reveals 5 key dimensionless parameters and the dependence of these curve shapes on each is revealed. The results point to future quantitative approaches to sensor design and calibration.
The increase of non-synchronous generation sources on a power network are changing the system dynamics and this can lead to problems with stability. One of the contributions to the change in system dynamics is the variation in system inertia. By approximating a traditional stability metric, the critical clearing time (CCT) in an energetic framework we conduct a parametric investigation of the effect of inertia on power system stability. A set of solid three phase to ground faults are considered on a small but not trivial power system, the two-machine infinite bus network. The performance of the approximated CCT is compared to the true CCT
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