电气与电子信息学院学术报告——Detection of Malicious Attacks in Autonomous Cyber-Physical Inverter-Based Microgrids

发布者:dqwm_admin发布时间:2023-03-05浏览次数:35

报告题目:Detection of Malicious Attacks in Autonomous Cyber-Physical Inverter-Based Microgrids

人:Prof. Charalambos Konstantinou

会议时间:37 (周二) 14:00

会议地点:腾讯会议 739-439-553

主办单位:重庆大学、输配电装备及系统安全与新技术国家重点实验室、重庆大学溧阳智慧城市研究院

协办单位:四川大学、电子科技大学、西南交通大学、成都理工大学、成都中医药大学、四川师范大学、西华大学、西南科技大学、西南大学、重庆邮电大学、重庆科技学院

Personal Profile:

Charalambos Konstantinou is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) and Computer Science (CS) at the Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Science and Engineering (CEMSE) Division of King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, Saudi Arabia. He is the Principal Investigator of the SENTRY Lab (Secure Next Generation Resilient Systems - sentry.kaust.edu.sa) and a member of the Resilient Computing and Cybersecurity Center (RC3) at KAUST. Before joining KAUST, he was an Assistant Professor with the Center for Advanced Power Systems (CAPS) at Florida State University (FSU). His research interests are in secure, trustworthy, and resilient cyber-physical and embedded IoT systems.

He is also interested in critical infrastructures security and resilience with special focus on smart grid technologies, renewable energy integration, and real-time simulation. He received a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from New York University (NYU), NY, in 2018, and a M.Eng. Degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Greece,in 2012

Abstract:

Power systems are facing unprecedented changes in operation and control as more diverse sources and loads are being connected to these complex cyber-physical energy systems. In addition due to the growing number of Internet-of-Things (loT) connected controllers and the use of communication and control interfaces, it is a major priority for power grids to be resilient to high-impact, low-probability cyber-physical adverse events, such as cyber-attacks. Such incidents, if left unabated, can intensify and elicit system dynamics instabilities, eventually causing outages and system failures. In this talk, we will give an overview of the research of the Secure Next Generation Resilient Systems (SENTRY) lab (sentry.kaust.edu.sa) at KAUST, presenting how load-altering attacks can compromise. via loT-connected high-wattage loads. the stability of low-inertia power systems. We will also demonstrate an integrated approach for multi-agent distribution systems able to perform the detection of such malicious cyber-physical attacks based on subspace methods.