Abstract
In this paper an optimal maintenance scheduling of generating units in a power system has been developed with transmission network representation. Here a DC load flow has been embedded in the maintenance model to include network constraints resulting in a more practical maintenance schedule. The model developed here uses the minimization of system cost (production cost plus the unserved energy cost) as the objective criterion, whereas the reliability objective function used is the minimization of unserved energy. The optimization is achieved by integer linear programming. The incorporation of transmission network adds significant complexity to maintenance scheduling. The proposed model enables almost all practical maintenance scheduling constraints to be handled easily. The optimization has been carried out to minimize the cost function considering different cases (i.e., with and without incorporation of the transmission network). The effectiveness of the proposed method has been demonstrated by obtaining numerical results on sample and real scale test systems. A comparison of the cost objective function clearly indicates that the maintenance schedule obtained from the simple generation model alone is more expensive than the one with transmission, and that there is a considerable degree of suboptimality in the former case.