Power grid stability under perturbation of single nodes: Effects of heterogeneity and internal nodes
Matthias Wolff, Pedro G. Lind, and Philipp Maass

TL;DR
This study analyzes power grid stability by examining how single-node perturbations affect the grid's ability to return to stable operation, highlighting the impact of heterogeneity and internal nodes on recovery times and stability probabilities.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of grid response to perturbations, emphasizing the effects of heterogeneity and internal nodes on stability and recovery times.
Findings
Strong perturbations can prevent grid return to stability.
Homogenized grid properties lead to faster, more reliable recovery.
Neglecting reactances underestimates return probabilities.
Abstract
Non-linear equations describing the time evolution of frequencies and voltages in power grids exhibit fixed points of stable grid operation. The dynamical behaviour after perturbations around these fixed points can be used to characterise the stability of the grid. We investigate both probabilities of return to a fixed point and times needed for this return after perturbation of single nodes. Our analysis is based on an IEEE test grid and the second-order swing equations for voltage phase angles at nodes in the synchronous machine model. The perturbations cover all possible changes of voltage angles and a wide range of frequency deviations in a range ~Hz around the common frequency in a synchronous fixed point state. Extensive numerical calculations are carried out to determine, for all node pairs , the…
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