2020 article

A Stackelberg Security Investment Game for Voltage Stability of Power Systems

2020 59th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC).

TL;DR: A modified Backward Induction method is proposed to find a cost-based Stackelberg equilibrium (CBSE) of the game, which saves the players’ costs while providing the optimal allocation of both players' investment resources under budget and covertness constraints. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: May 2, 2021

We formulate a Stackelberg game between an attacker and a defender of a power system. The attacker attempts to alter the load setpoints of the power system covertly and intelligently, so that the voltage stability margin of the grid is reduced, driving the entire system towards a voltage collapse. The defender, or the system operator, aims to compensate for this reduction by retuning the reactive power injection to the grid by switching on control devices, such as a bank of shunt capacitors. A modified Backward Induction method is proposed to find a cost-based Stackelberg equilibrium (CBSE) of the game, which saves the players’ costs while providing the optimal allocation of both players’ investment resources under budget and covertness constraints. We analyze the proposed game extensively for the IEEE 9-bus power system model and present an example of its performance for the IEEE 39-bus power system model. It is demonstrated that the defender is able to maintain system stability unless its security budget is much lower than the attacker’s budget.