Python for Power Systems Analysis
Project description
1 Python for Power System Analysis
1.1 About
PyPSA stands for “Python for Power System Analysis”. It is pronounced “pipes-ah”.
PyPSA is a free software toolbox for simulating and optimising modern power systems that include features such as conventional generators with unit commitment, variable wind and solar generation, storage units, sector coupling and mixed alternating and direct current networks. PyPSA is designed to scale well with large networks and long time series.
As of 2018 PyPSA is under heavy development and therefore it is recommended to use caution when using it in a production environment. Some APIs may change - the changes in each PyPSA version are listed in the doc/release_notes.rst.
PyPSA was initially developed by the Renewable Energy Group at FIAS to carry out simulations for the CoNDyNet project, financed by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) as part of the Stromnetze Research Initiative.
1.2 Documentation
1.3 What PyPSA does and does not do (yet)
PyPSA can calculate:
static power flow (using both the full non-linear network equations and the linearised network equations)
linear optimal power flow (least-cost optimisation of power plant and storage dispatch within network constraints, using the linear network equations, over several snapshots)
security-constrained linear optimal power flow
total electricity system least-cost investment optimisation (using linear network equations, over several snapshots simultaneously for optimisation of generation and storage dispatch and investment in the capacities of generation, storage and transmission)
It has models for:
meshed multiply-connected AC and DC networks, with controllable converters between AC and DC networks
standard types for lines and transformers following the implementation in pandapower
conventional dispatchable generators with unit commitment
generators with time-varying power availability, such as wind and solar generators
storage units with efficiency losses
simple hydroelectricity with inflow and spillage
coupling with other energy carriers
basic components out of which more complicated assets can be built, such as Combined Heat and Power (CHP) units, heat pumps, resistive Power-to-Heat (P2H), Power-to-Gas (P2G), battery electric vehicles (BEVs), etc.; each of these is demonstrated in the examples
Functionality that will definitely be added soon:
Multi-year investment optimisation
Simple RMS simulations with the swing equation
Distributed active power slack
Non-linear power flow solution using analytic continuation in the complex plane following GridCal
Functionality that may be added in the future:
Short-circuit current calculations
Dynamic RMS simulations
Small signal stability analysis
Interactive web-based GUI with SVG
OPF with the full non-linear network equations
Dynamic EMT simulations
Unbalanced load flow
Port to Julia
1.4 Example scripts as Jupyter notebooks
There are extensive examples available as Jupyter notebooks. They are also described in the doc/examples.rst and are available as Python scripts in examples/.
1.5 Screenshots
The showcase for PyPSA is the SciGRID example which demonstrates interactive plots generated with the plotly library.
Optimised capacities of generation and storage for a 95% reduction in CO2 emissions in Europe compare to 1990 levels:
1.6 What PyPSA uses under the hood
PyPSA is written and tested to be compatible with both Python 2.7 and Python 3.5.
It leans heavily on the following Python packages:
pandas for storing data about components and time series
numpy and scipy for calculations, such as linear algebra and sparse matrix calculations
pyomo for preparing optimisation problems (currently only linear)
plotly for interactive plotting
matplotlib for static plotting
networkx for some network calculations
py.test for unit testing
logging for managing messages
The optimisation uses pyomo so that it is independent of the preferred solver (you can use e.g. the free software GLPK or the commercial software Gurobi).
The time-expensive calculations, such as solving sparse linear equations, are carried out using the scipy.sparse libraries.
1.7 Mailing list
PyPSA has a Google Group forum / mailing list.
1.8 Citing PyPSA
If you use PyPSA for your research, we would appreciate it if you would cite the following paper:
T. Brown, J. Hörsch, D. Schlachtberger, PyPSA: Python for Power System Analysis, 2018, Journal of Open Research Software, 6(1), arXiv:1707.09913, DOI:10.5334/jors.188
Please use the following BibTeX:
@article{PyPSA, author = {T. Brown and J. H\"orsch and D. Schlachtberger}, title = {{PyPSA: Python for Power System Analysis}}, journal = {Journal of Open Research Software}, volume = {6}, issue = {1}, number = {4}, year = {2018}, eprint = {1707.09913}, url = {https://doi.org/10.5334/jors.188}, doi = {10.5334/jors.188} }
If you want to cite a specific PyPSA version, each release of PyPSA is stored on Zenodo with a release-specific DOI. This can be found linked from the overall PyPSA Zenodo DOI:
1.9 Licence
Copyright 2015-2018 Tom Brown (FIAS), Jonas Hörsch (FIAS), David Schlachtberger (FIAS)
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
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