Measurement placement in electric power transmission and distribution grids: Review of concepts, methods, and research needs
Marcos Netto, Venkat Krishnan, Yingchen Zhang, Lamine Mili

TL;DR
This review paper discusses the importance of strategic measurement placement in electric power grids, highlighting challenges, existing strategies, and research gaps to guide future innovations in grid monitoring.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of measurement placement concepts, methods, and research needs, emphasizing the need for adaptable strategies across different grid types.
Findings
Existing strategies focus on transmission grids, with less on distribution grids.
Technological evolution impacts measurement placement strategies.
There is a significant research gap in comprehensive, adaptable placement methods.
Abstract
Sensing and measurement systems are quintessential to the safe and reliable operation of electric power grids. Their strategic placement is of ultimate importance because it is not economically viable to install measurement systems on every node and branch of a power grid, though they need to be monitored. An overwhelming number of strategies have been developed to meet oftentimes multiple conflicting objectives. The prime challenge in formulating the problem lies in developing a heuristic or an optimization model that, though mathematically tractable and constrained in cost, leads to trustworthy technical solutions. Further, large-scale, long-term deployments pose additional challenges because the boundary conditions change as technologies evolve. For instance, the advent of new technologies in sensing and measurement, as well as in communications and networking, might impact the cost…
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