Operator-Centered Design of a Nodal Loadability Network Visualization
David Marino - Hitachi Energy Research, Montreal, Canada
Maxwell Keleher - Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
Krzysztof Chmielowiec - Hitachi Energy Research, Krakow, Poland
Antony Hilliard - Hitachi Energy Research, Montreal, Canada
Pawel Dawidowski - Hitachi Energy Research, Krakow, Poland
Room: Bayshore VI
2024-10-14T16:00:00ZGMT-0600Change your timezone on the schedule page
2024-10-14T16:00:00Z
Abstract
Transmission System Operators (TSO) often need to integrate multiple sources of information to make decisions in real time.In cases where a single power line goes offline, due to a natural event or scheduled outage, there typically will be a contingency plan that the TSO may utilize to mitigate the situation. In cases where two or more power lines go offline, this contingency plan is no longer valid, and they must re-prepare and reason about the network in real time. A key network property that must be balanced is loadability--the range of permissible voltage levels for a specific bus (or node), understood as a function of power and its active (P) and reactive (Q) components. Loadability provides information of how much more demand a specific node can handle, before system became unstable. To increase loadability, the TSO can potentially make control actions that raise or lower P or Q, which results in change the voltage levels required to be within permissible limits. While many methods exist to calculate loadability and represent loadability to end users, there has been little focus on tailoring loadability visualizations to the unique needs of TSOs. In this paper we involve operations domain experts in a human centered design process to prototype two new loadability visualizations for TSOs. We contribute a design paper that yields: (1) a working model of the operator's decision making process, (2) example artifacts of the two data visualization techniques, and (3) a critical qualitative expert review of our designs.