Nowadays, economy, security and quality of life heavily depend on the resiliency of a number of critical infrastructures, including the Electric Power System (EPS), through which vital services are provided. In existing EPS two cooperating infrastructures are involved: the Electric Infrastructure (EI) for the electricity generation and transportation to final users, and its Information-Technology based Control System (ITCS) devoted to controlling and regulating the EI physical parameters and triggering reconfigurations in emergency situations. This paper proposes a modeling framework to capture EI and ITCS aspects, focusing on their interdependencies that contributed to the occurrence of several cascading failures in the past 40 years. A quite detailed analysis of the EI and ITCS structure and behavior is performed; in particular, the ITCS and EI behaviors are described by discrete and hybrid-state processes, respectively. To substantiate the approach, the implementation of a few basic modeling mechanisms inside an existing multiformalism/multi-solution tool is also discussed.

On a modeling framework for the analysis of interdependencies in Electrical Power Systems / S. Chiaradonna; P. Lollini; F. Di Giandomenico. - STAMPA. - (2007), pp. 185-194. (Intervento presentato al convegno 37th Annual IEEE/IFIP International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN 2007) tenutosi a Edinburgh nel 25-28 June 2007) [10.1109/DSN.2007.68].

On a modeling framework for the analysis of interdependencies in Electrical Power Systems

CHIARADONNA, SILVANO;LOLLINI, PAOLO;DI GIANDOMENICO, FELICITA
2007

Abstract

Nowadays, economy, security and quality of life heavily depend on the resiliency of a number of critical infrastructures, including the Electric Power System (EPS), through which vital services are provided. In existing EPS two cooperating infrastructures are involved: the Electric Infrastructure (EI) for the electricity generation and transportation to final users, and its Information-Technology based Control System (ITCS) devoted to controlling and regulating the EI physical parameters and triggering reconfigurations in emergency situations. This paper proposes a modeling framework to capture EI and ITCS aspects, focusing on their interdependencies that contributed to the occurrence of several cascading failures in the past 40 years. A quite detailed analysis of the EI and ITCS structure and behavior is performed; in particular, the ITCS and EI behaviors are described by discrete and hybrid-state processes, respectively. To substantiate the approach, the implementation of a few basic modeling mechanisms inside an existing multiformalism/multi-solution tool is also discussed.
2007
Proc. of the 37th Annual IEEE/IFIP International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN 2007)
37th Annual IEEE/IFIP International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN 2007)
Edinburgh
25-28 June 2007
S. Chiaradonna; P. Lollini; F. Di Giandomenico
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/394254
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