MS&E 224:
Resilience and Reliable Network Design
Planning for large-scale infrastructure networks is with the objective of improving reliability and resilience. Over the last decades, a number of disasters have resulted in substantial losses of human, significant damage to property, and massive service interruptions for a number large infrastructure systems. The concepts reliability and resilience are now frequently used to characterize how well these infrastructure systems, their operators, and their users are prepared and capable to recover from disruptive events. In order to analyze a network, attention must be paid to three important aspects: First, the election of a failure model that is complex enough to capture the interaction between components but, at the same time, simple enough to calibrate with the available information. Second, study the performance of the network. This means that given a failure model, we need to develop methodologies to compute the performance of the network. Finally, the comparison of different network designs and to choose, according to a budget constraint, those which have a better performance. Natural disasters, such as earthquake and wildfires, can cause large blackouts and pose a challenge that a network should be able to overcome. Research into natural disaster impact on electric power systems is can help us understand the causes of the blackouts, explore ways to prepare and harden the grid, and increase the resilience of the power grid under such events. Discussion of how network design should address these challenges. Lectures, with regular weekly assignments and a study group for a final project. The target students include graduate and undergraduate students in MS&E, and other students on campus, including, for example, Civil and Environmental Engineering, ICME, and interested students at the Doerr School, among others. Prerequisite: probability such as 120, 220, or CEE 203. Recommended 121 or 221.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3