Visible to the public A Resilient Control Against Time-Delay Switch and Denial of Service Cyber Attacks on Load Frequency Control of Distributed Power Systems

TitleA Resilient Control Against Time-Delay Switch and Denial of Service Cyber Attacks on Load Frequency Control of Distributed Power Systems
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsShahkar, S., Khorasani, K.
Conference Name2020 IEEE Conference on Control Technology and Applications (CCTA)
Date PublishedAug. 2020
PublisherIEEE
ISBN Number978-1-7281-7140-1
Keywordscentralized controller, command injection attacks, composability, control signals, cyberattack, Delay effects, delays, distributed power systems, false data injection cyber attacks, feedback, frequency control, load frequency control, load regulation, locally generated feedback control laws, Metrics, power generating stations, power system control, power system security, power system stability, pubcrawl, resilience, Resiliency, resilient TDS control, security of data, sensing loops, Sensors, TDS cyber attack, telemetered control commands, telemetry, time-delay switch cyber attack
Abstract

A time-delay switch (TDS) cyber attack is a deliberate attempt by malicious adversaries aiming at destabilizing a power system by impeding the communication signals to/from the centralized controller from/to the network sensors and generating stations that participate in the load frequency control (LFC). A TDS cyber attack can be targeting the sensing loops (transmitting network measurements to the centralized controller) or the control signals dispatched from the centralized controller to the governor valves of the generating stations. A resilient TDS control strategy is proposed and developed in this work that thwarts network instabilities that are caused by delays in the sensing loops, and control commands, and guarantees normal operation of the LFC mechanism. This will be achieved by augmenting the telemetered control commands with locally generated feedback control laws (i.e., "decentralized" control commands) taking measurements that are available and accessible at the power generating stations (locally) independent from all the telemetered signals to/from the centralized controller. Our objective is to devise a controller that is capable of circumventing all types of TDS and DoS (Denial of Service) cyber attacks as well as a broad class of False Data Injection (FDI) cyber attacks.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9206282
DOI10.1109/CCTA41146.2020.9206282
Citation Keyshahkar_resilient_2020