Distribution Systems Hardening against Natural Disasters
Abstract
Distribution systems are often crippled by catastrophic damage caused by a natural disaster. Well-designed hardening can significantly improve the performance of post-disaster restoration operations. Such performance is quantified by a resilience measure associated with the operability trajectory. The distribution system hardening problem can be formulated as a two-stage stochastic problem, where the inner operational problem addresses the proper sequencing of post-disaster repairs and the outer problem the judicious selection of components to harden. We propose a deterministic robust reformulation with two solution methods, an MILP formulation and a heuristic approach. We provide computational evidence on various IEEE test feeders which illustrates that the heuristic approach provides near-optimal hardening solutions efficiently.
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