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Federated Learning for Smart Grid: A Survey on Applications and Potential Vulnerabilities

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The Smart Grid (SG) is a critical energy infrastructure that collects real-time electricity usage data to forecast future energy demands using information and communication technologies (ICT). Due to growing concerns about data security and privacy in SGs, federated learning (FL) has emerged as a promising training framework. FL offers a balance between privacy, efficiency, and accuracy in SGs by enabling collaborative model training without sharing private data from IoT devices. In this survey, we thoroughly review recent advancements in designing FL-based SG systems across three stages: generation, transmission and distribution, and consumption. Additionally, we explore potential vulnerabilities that may arise when implementing FL in these stages. Finally, we discuss the gap between state-of-the-art FL research and its practical applications in SGs and propose future research directions. These focus on potential attack and defense strategies for FL-based SG systems and the need to build a robust FL-based SG infrastructure. Unlike traditional surveys that address security issues in centralized machine learning methods for SG systems, this survey specifically examines the applications and security concerns in FL-based SG systems for the first time. Our aim is to inspire further research into applications and improvements in the robustness of FL-based SG systems.


A Scalable Network-Aware Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning Framework for Decentralized Inverter-based Voltage Control

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper addresses the challenges associated with decentralized voltage control in power grids due to an increase in distributed generations (DGs). Traditional model-based voltage control methods struggle with the rapid energy fluctuations and uncertainties of these DGs. While multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) has shown potential for decentralized secondary control, scalability issues arise when dealing with a large number of DGs. This problem lies in the dominant centralized training and decentralized execution (CTDE) framework, where the critics take global observations and actions. To overcome these challenges, we propose a scalable network-aware (SNA) framework that leverages network structure to truncate the input to the critic's Q-function, thereby improving scalability and reducing communication costs during training. Further, the SNA framework is theoretically grounded with provable approximation guarantee, and it can seamlessly integrate with multiple multi-agent actor-critic algorithms. The proposed SNA framework is successfully demonstrated in a system with 114 DGs, providing a promising solution for decentralized voltage control in increasingly complex power grid systems.


Adversarial Purification for Data-Driven Power System Event Classifiers with Diffusion Models

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The global deployment of the phasor measurement units (PMUs) enables real-time monitoring of the power system, which has stimulated considerable research into machine learning-based models for event detection and classification. However, recent studies reveal that machine learning-based methods are vulnerable to adversarial attacks, which can fool the event classifiers by adding small perturbations to the raw PMU data. To mitigate the threats posed by adversarial attacks, research on defense strategies is urgently needed. This paper proposes an effective adversarial purification method based on the diffusion model to counter adversarial attacks on the machine learning-based power system event classifier. The proposed method includes two steps: injecting noise into the PMU data; and utilizing a pre-trained neural network to eliminate the added noise while simultaneously removing perturbations introduced by the adversarial attacks. The proposed adversarial purification method significantly increases the accuracy of the event classifier under adversarial attacks while satisfying the requirements of real-time operations. In addition, the theoretical analysis reveals that the proposed diffusion model-based adversarial purification method decreases the distance between the original and compromised PMU data, which reduces the impacts of adversarial attacks. The empirical results on a large-scale real-world PMU dataset validate the effectiveness and computational efficiency of the proposed adversarial purification method.


Targeted Adversarial Attacks on Wind Power Forecasts

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In recent years, researchers proposed a variety of deep learning models for wind power forecasting. These models predict the wind power generation of wind farms or entire regions more accurately than traditional machine learning algorithms or physical models. However, latest research has shown that deep learning models can often be manipulated by adversarial attacks. Since wind power forecasts are essential for the stability of modern power systems, it is important to protect them from this threat. In this work, we investigate the vulnerability of two different forecasting models to targeted, semi-targeted, and untargeted adversarial attacks. We consider a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network for predicting the power generation of individual wind farms and a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) for forecasting the wind power generation throughout Germany. Moreover, we propose the Total Adversarial Robustness Score (TARS), an evaluation metric for quantifying the robustness of regression models to targeted and semi-targeted adversarial attacks. It assesses the impact of attacks on the model's performance, as well as the extent to which the attacker's goal was achieved, by assigning a score between 0 (very vulnerable) and 1 (very robust). In our experiments, the LSTM forecasting model was fairly robust and achieved a TARS value of over 0.78 for all adversarial attacks investigated. The CNN forecasting model only achieved TARS values below 0.10 when trained ordinarily, and was thus very vulnerable. Yet, its robustness could be significantly improved by adversarial training, which always resulted in a TARS above 0.46.


A Comprehensive Survey on Deep Graph Representation Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Graph representation learning aims to effectively encode high-dimensional sparse graph-structured data into low-dimensional dense vectors, which is a fundamental task that has been widely studied in a range of fields, including machine learning and data mining. Classic graph embedding methods follow the basic idea that the embedding vectors of interconnected nodes in the graph can still maintain a relatively close distance, thereby preserving the structural information between the nodes in the graph. However, this is sub-optimal due to: (i) traditional methods have limited model capacity which limits the learning performance; (ii) existing techniques typically rely on unsupervised learning strategies and fail to couple with the latest learning paradigms; (iii) representation learning and downstream tasks are dependent on each other which should be jointly enhanced. With the remarkable success of deep learning, deep graph representation learning has shown great potential and advantages over shallow (traditional) methods, there exist a large number of deep graph representation learning techniques have been proposed in the past decade, especially graph neural networks. In this survey, we conduct a comprehensive survey on current deep graph representation learning algorithms by proposing a new taxonomy of existing state-of-the-art literature. Specifically, we systematically summarize the essential components of graph representation learning and categorize existing approaches by the ways of graph neural network architectures and the most recent advanced learning paradigms. Moreover, this survey also provides the practical and promising applications of deep graph representation learning. Last but not least, we state new perspectives and suggest challenging directions which deserve further investigations in the future.


Machine-learned Adversarial Attacks against Fault Prediction Systems in Smart Electrical Grids

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In smart electrical grids, fault detection tasks may have a high impact on society due to their economic and critical implications. In the recent years, numerous smart grid applications, such as defect detection and load forecasting, have embraced data-driven methodologies. The purpose of this study is to investigate the challenges associated with the security of machine learning (ML) applications in the smart grid scenario. Indeed, the robustness and security of these data-driven algorithms have not been extensively studied in relation to all power grid applications. We demonstrate first that the deep neural network method used in the smart grid is susceptible to adversarial perturbation. Then, we highlight how studies on fault localization and type classification illustrate the weaknesses of present ML algorithms in smart grids to various adversarial attacks


Transferable Deep Learning Power System Short-Term Voltage Stability Assessment with Physics-Informed Topological Feature Engineering

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Deep learning (DL) algorithms have been widely applied to short-term voltage stability (STVS) assessment in power systems. However, transferring the knowledge learned in one power grid to other power grids with topology changes is still a challenging task. This paper proposed a transferable DL-based model for STVS assessment by constructing the topology-aware voltage dynamic features from raw PMU data. Since the reactive power flow and grid topology are essential to voltage stability, the topology-aware and physics-informed voltage dynamic features are utilized to effectively represent the topological and temporal patterns from post-disturbance system dynamic trajectories. The proposed DL-based STVS assessment model is tested under random operating conditions on the New England 39-bus system. It has 99.99\% classification accuracy of the short-term voltage stability status using the topology-aware and physics-informed voltage dynamic features. In addition to high accuracy, the experiments show good adaptability to PMU errors. Moreover, The proposed STVS assessment method has outstanding performance on new grid topologies after fine-tuning. In particular, the highest accuracy reaches 99.68\% in evaluation, which demonstrates a good knowledge transfer ability of the proposed model for power grid topology change.


Evaluating Distribution System Reliability with Hyperstructures Graph Convolutional Nets

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Nowadays, it is broadly recognized in the power system community that to meet the ever expanding energy sector's needs, it is no longer possible to rely solely on physics-based models and that reliable, timely and sustainable operation of energy systems is impossible without systematic integration of artificial intelligence (AI) tools. Nevertheless, the adoption of AI in power systems is still limited, while integration of AI particularly into distribution grid investment planning is still an uncharted territory. We make the first step forward to bridge this gap by showing how graph convolutional networks coupled with the hyperstructures representation learning framework can be employed for accurate, reliable, and computationally efficient distribution grid planning with resilience objectives. We further propose a Hyperstructures Graph Convolutional Neural Networks (Hyper-GCNNs) to capture hidden higher order representations of distribution networks with attention mechanism. Our numerical experiments show that the proposed Hyper-GCNNs approach yields substantial gains in computational efficiency compared to the prevailing methodology in distribution grid planning and also noticeably outperforms seven state-of-the-art models from deep learning (DL) community.


Adversarial Attacks and Defense Methods for Power Quality Recognition

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Vulnerability of various machine learning methods to adversarial examples has been recently explored in the literature. Power systems which use these vulnerable methods face a huge threat against adversarial examples. To this end, we first propose a signal-specific method and a universal signal-agnostic method to attack power systems using generated adversarial examples. Black-box attacks based on transferable characteristics and the above two methods are also proposed and evaluated. We then adopt adversarial training to defend systems against adversarial attacks. Experimental analyses demonstrate that our signal-specific attack method provides less perturbation compared to the FGSM (Fast Gradient Sign Method), and our signal-agnostic attack method can generate perturbations fooling most natural signals with high probability. What's more, the attack method based on the universal signal-agnostic algorithm has a higher transfer rate of black-box attacks than the attack method based on the signal-specific algorithm. In addition, the results show that the proposed adversarial training improves robustness of power systems to adversarial examples. OWER quality refers to a variety of electromagnetic phenomena that characterize voltage and current measured at a given time instance and location in a power system [2]. Disturbance of power quality (PQ) signals can cause severe problems in electrical grids [3].


Unsupervised detection and open-set classification of fast-ramped flexibility activation events

arXiv.org Machine Learning

The continuous electrification of the mobility and heating sectors adds much-needed flexibility to the power system. However, flexibility utilization also introduces new challenges to distribution system operators (DSOs), who need mechanisms to supervise flexibility activations and monitor their effect on distribution network operation. Flexibility activations can be broadly categorized to those originating from electricity markets and those initiated by the DSO to avoid constraint violations. Simultaneous electricity market driven flexibility activations may cause voltage quality or temporary overloading issues, and the failure of flexibility activations initiated by the DSO might leave critical grid states unresolved. This work proposes a novel data processing pipeline for automated real-time identification of fast-ramped flexibility activation events. Its practical value is twofold: i) potentially critical flexibility activations originating from electricity markets can be detected by the DSO at an early stage, and ii) successful activation of DSO-requested flexibility can be verified by the operator. In both cases the increased awareness would allow the DSO to take counteractions to avoid potentially critical grid situations. The proposed pipeline combines techniques from unsupervised detection and open-set classification. For both building blocks feasibility is systematically evaluated and proofed on real load and flexibility activation data.