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The term "smart grid" covers a range of devices and systems that leverage recent advances in
digital technology and communications to improve the efficiency, performance, and reliability of
the existing electric power system infrastructure. Although the "smart grid" is most frequently
discussed in terms of advanced electric meters and other distribution system technologies, it also
includes important enhancements to the transmission system. In particular, phasor measurement
units, or PMUs, are a new "smart" technology being deployed throughout North America (see
map), monitoring what happens on the transmission grid.
This map shows a snapshot of PMU deployment as of March 2012. The North American
SynchroPhasor Initiative (NASPI) reports there are about 500 networked PMUs installed. NASPI
expects that approximately 1,000 PMUs will be in place and networked by the end of 2014, a
timeline associated with the Department of Energy's Smart Grid Investment Grant (SGIG)
program.
Electric power systems are enormous integrated machines. In the United States and Canada,
there are four large electric systems, called interconnections, that underpin the provision of
electricity service to all consumers. For example, the Eastern Interconnection covers an area
from the Atlantic Coast nearly as far west as the Rockies in the United States as well as much of
Canada. For these integrated systems to operate reliably, system operators must continuously
match electricity generation to electricity demand, within tight tolerances, as demand changes
throughout the day. Further, the operation of each component of the electric power system—
every generator, transformer, and transmission circuit—must be closely synchronized.
A mismatch between supply and demand or a breakdown in synchronization can put stress on the
grid. If these problems are not rapidly identified and corrected, the result can be deterioration in
power quality or power outages. PMU data can be used to monitor and mitigate these problems.
Comparing data between points on an electric system is a good way to reveal stress on the
system and home in on the source of the problem. PMUs monitor the characteristics of electricity
flowing through a particular location, for instance, at the point where a generator connects to the
bulk power system, or at a substation. The ability to compare time-synchronized data on the
same timescale, among widely separated locations, is a relatively new achievement, based on
two major improvements:
PMUs can accumulate large amounts of data. Telecommunications technology—via fiber optic,
cable, or satellite—plays an important role in compiling synchrophasor data (example: a
company forwarding data from 60 PMUs might require two dedicated T1 lines.). Developing the
necessary communications networks is currently a factor limiting many real-time applications of
synchrophasor data. PMU capability is comparatively inexpensive—often an optional function
on standard equipment—but the costs of adding the necessary networking infrastructure are
usually larger, as seen in the data collected as part of the SGIG program.
Developing methods for accumulating, analyzing, and distributing vast amounts of data is a
challenge throughout the range of smart grid technologies. While there are a number of software
applications in use and under development that take phasor data and turn it into actionable
information, the industry is still working to understand what high-speed phasor data reveal about
the grid's behavior. That insight is needed to make software applications fully usable.
In time, applications for PMUs may include integrating intermittent renewable generators and
automating controls for transmission system and demand response equipment, as well as
developing increasingly-efficient use of electric power system infrastructure. On a real-time
basis, power system operators and reliability coordinators might use synchrophasor data to
enhance situational awareness, preventing transmission grid failures, isolating problems, and
speeding outage restoration when blackouts do occur. One application may be automated
responses to system disruptions, which can execute faster than manual action.
Offline, synchrophasor data are already being used to improve electric system models used in
real-time operations and planning, as well as for disturbance analysis and forensic investigation.
For example, the investigation into the causes of the 2003 Northeast Blackout required many
person-years of labor, but the investigation of the 2011 blackout in the Southwest is proceeding
much more quickly, in large part due to the availability of PMU data. Official recommendations
made after the 2003 blackout called out the need for time-synchronized data and its use in wide-
area situational awareness.
For more information on PMUs and the use of synchrophasor data, see the North American
SynchroPhasor Initiative website and the recent report from the North American Electric
Reliability Corporation (2010).