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A library of power system component models written in the Modelica language that can be used for power system dynamic analysis, such as phasor time-domain simulations.

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OpenIPSL: Open-Instance Power System Library:

The OpenIPSL or Open-Instance Power System Library is library of power system component models written in the Modelica language that can be used for power system dynamic analysis, such as phasor time-domain simulations.

OpenIPSL is currently developed and maintained by Prof. Luigi Vanfretti's research group ALSETLab at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, collaborators and friends, such as Dietmar Winkler and FOSSEE (contributions are welcome!).

Scope

The purposes of OpenIPSL are to be used for research and education (therefore frequent release times may be available), with maximum compatibility with OpenModelica (to provide a free/libre and cost-free alternative for power system dynamic simulation), to provide as many as possible typical "test networks" for use in research and teaching, and to be developed in such way that the library can efficiently be used for power system simulation within Modelica-based workflows (i.e., helping to give reference power system models for development and testing of Modelica back-end compilers) when faced with power system simulation challenges.

Documentation:

Please follow this link to our documentation.

Tutorials on OpenIPSL have been given at many conferences, and are available under Release. We recommend you start from there.

Our documentation assumes that you have working knowledge of the Modelica language, are familiar with a Modelica-compliant modeling and simulation environment, that you have proeficient knowledge on power system steady state analysis (i.e., the so called "power flow"), and knowledge on power system dynamic modeling (i.e., the called "transient" and "small-signal" stability).

As such, the documentation is limited, and aims to provide very consice information for people who fulfill the requirements above.

If you do not fulfill these requirements, we recommend that you first get acquainted with both Modelica and Power Systems.

Additional details about many of the models in OpenIPSL are available in disparate sources. Some of these are a reflection of the results from the efforts of many students that have worked with Prof. Luigi Vanfretti.

See our Publication List for more details on the models available.

In addition, you can also browse a few of the MSc thesis of the students that carried out their MSc and PhD research under Prof. Vanfretti's group in the following links:

  • Joan Russiñol (2013, download),
  • Le Qi (2014, dowload),
  • M.Ahsan Adib Murad (2015, download), and
  • Mengjia Zhang (2015,download).
  • Marcelo de Castro Fernandes (2017, download)
  • Miguel Aguilera Chavez (2017, available soon.)
  • Biswarup Mukherjee (2017, available soon.)
  • Dr. Tetiana Bogodorova (2017, download)

We would love to develop a detailed documentation, however, the development of OpenIPSL is being carried out in "best effort" basis by the project contributors.

If you want a better documentation, and are willing to pay for our time to develop it, get in touch with use through the "Issues" feature in Github.

Notice to Users:

This project encompasses the development of a Modelica library for power system simulation. As such, there are no solver tools provided in this repository (no Power Flow Solvers, no Time-Domain solvers, etc.). You can find more information in our documentation.

The OpenIPSL contains the models developed by SmarTS Lab during the iTesla project, and necesssary models that were publically released or implemented by RTE and AIA, that we can maintain properly. Note that several models have been removed from those that are available in iPSL (see here). We have removed all models that are dependent on a specific software tool from the power systems domain that we don't have access for Software-to-Software validation, and those that require us to have access to closed (and expensive) standards that we don't have money to buy in order to maintain them (i.e., IEC Wind Turbine models).

Contributing:

Contributions to the library are welcome and can be submitted in the form of pull requests to this repository. Contributions can be of different nature, such as addition of a new component model, re-organisation of the structure of the library, change in the development practices, etc.

Please consult the contribution guidelines.

More information about our contributors can be found over here. Don't hesitate to contact us.

Citing OpenIPSL in Publications:

If you use OpenIPSL in your work or research, all we ask you in exchange is that you cite the reference publications, according to your use. Please consult our Publication List, for browsing the reference publications.

Preferably, please cite the following paper:

  • Maxime Baudette, Marcelo Castro, Tin Rabuzin, Jan Lavenius, Tetiana Bogodorova, Luigi Vanfretti, OpenIPSL: Open-Instance Power System Library — Update 1.5 to “iTesla Power Systems Library (iPSL): A Modelica library for phasor time-domain simulations”, SoftwareX, Volume 7, January–June 2018, Pages 34-36, ISSN 2352-7110, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.softx.2018.01.002

You are also welcome to submit your contributions as stated above.

History

The iPSL is a Modelica library developed during the iTesla project. The members of this project (OpenIPSL) at SmarTS Lab (now ALSETLab) where key developers of the iPSL until March 31, 2016, when the iTesla project was completed. Prof. Luigi Vanfretti lead the development of a large amount of the models of the library (particularly those that replicate results from PSAT and PSS/E). iPSL is part of the iTesla Tool, and thus, it is subject to the needs of the consortium that develops the iTesla Tool. Therefore, the SmarTS Lab / ALSETLab team decided to create the OpenIPSL fork in order to develop the library in a direction that is more suitable for researchers and teachers/professors, and in a transparent, open source software approach.

Copyright and License Information:

The OpenIPSL is released under the same license as former iPSL project. All changes applied in this fork have the following copyright statement.

OpenIPSL:

Copyright July 2017 - current Luigi Vanfretti, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, ALSETLab, Troy, NY.

Copyright April 2016 - May 2017 SmarTS Lab; Prof. Luigi Vanfretti's research group formerly at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, now ALSETLab at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, USA.

The authors can be contacted by email: luigi.vanfretti@gmail.com. This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0.

iPSL:

Copyright 2015-March 31 2016 RTE (France), SmarTS Lab (Prof. Luigi Vanfretti's research group formerly at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden), AIA (Spain) and DTU (Denmark). The authors can be contacted by email: info@itesla-ipsl.org This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0.

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A library of power system component models written in the Modelica language that can be used for power system dynamic analysis, such as phasor time-domain simulations.

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