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An Overview of the U.S. Electric Power Grid Generation Choices, Reliability, Challenges Tom Ferguson, P.E. Adjunct Instructor Dept. of Electrical Engineering University of Minnesota, Duluth Presentation to EE 1001 September 19, 2013
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Where Electricity Comes From
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What Do We Know About This? 1.We plug LOADS into it 2.It has THREE prongs in standard layout 3.The VOLTAGE is ~115 VAC 4.The WAVEFORM is sinusoidal 5.Only 60 HZ is present 6.ELECTRONS come from somewhere 7.It’s almost always “ON” BUT! 1.Limited to 15 AMPS 2.Europe uses different plug 3.Voltage varies + 5% 4.Waveform is usually not “clean” 5.Harmonics may be present 6.Electrons come from ALL generators 7.It’s 99.99% reliable (off for 53 minutes/yr)
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The Grid Powers Society Human behavior repeats itself daily –Morning routine: lights, hot water, electronics –Stores open: lights, heating/cooling –Industry starts: pumps, motors, arc furnaces The grid must respond to these loads –generators must be ready and reliable –generators must be controllable to match load –transmission/distribution lines must be intact It had better work well, as loads increase quickly
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A Typical Day on the California Grid 4 a.m. 2 p.m. 1 Megawatt can power about 1000 homes Ramps up by 4500 MW in 80 minutes
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Generating Choices What types of generation are used? Varies across U.S. according to –availability of fossil fuels –availability of renewable energy sources –water availability –environmental limitations –state policies on renewables and nonrenewable generation
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Generating Choices Generators usually fall into one of 3 regions: –Base Load Must run essentially 24/7 annually Expensive to build, but provides lowest cost over time –Intermediate Load Runs less often than base load generation Less costly to build, but more costly to run –Peak Load Runs only to meet peak demands Least expensive to build, most costly to run We can visualize these regions on a Load Duration Curve
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Base Load Generation Intermediate Load Generation Peak Load Gen
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Power Generation Technologies
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Includes Hydro Biomass Wind Solid Waste Geothermal Solar PV Solar Thermal Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Electric Power Monthly (June 2013). Percentages based on Table 1.1 for 2012 Calender Year. http://www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/index.cfm?src=Electricity-f2 Updated 9/2013. Percentages on an ENERGY basis, not capacity. Coal 37% Natural Gas 30% Nuclear 19% Renewables 12% 2012
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Base Load Generation Nuclear, Coal, Geothermal, Wind*, Solar* Intermediate Load Generation Hydro, Natural Gas, Solid Waste Peak Load Gen Gas, Hydro Where Do These Technologies Fit on our Load Duration Curve? *Wind and solar output must be taken when available, sometimes affecting baseload gen
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Challenges with Wind Adds no inertia to grid (no energy storage) Poor low-voltage behavior Limited contribution to peak load capability Not dispatchable Negative correlation with loads When loads are greatest during the mid-day, wind generation is lowest. Conversely, wind is highest when least needed (night).
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Tying Generators Together with Loads High Voltage Transmission Lines –Connects generators with loads –Transmit energy at near speed of light –High voltage reduces current flow (P=V x I) –Reduced current reduces losses (P loss =I 2 R)
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Tying Generators Together with Loads Three Synchronized Regions in U.S. –Eastern U.S. (east of Rockies) –Western U.S. –Texas All generators in each region are synchronized
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Putting It All Together “The Grid” = Generators (about 18,000) + HV Transmission Network
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Grid Reliability Standards exist to ensure reliability –Extensive filings and audits –Severe financial penalties Wide-area (multi-state) reliability affected by: –Major outages of generators or transmission lines –Growth of non-dispatchable wind and solar –Inability to run existing or build new baseload gen –Climate change: warmer water and less of it Local reliability affected by: –Lightning and high winds –Animals (squirrels, rodents, snakes) –Right-of-way incursions (traffic accidents, train derailments)
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Good Luck!
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