Physics-Informed Neural Networks for Accelerating Power System State Estimation
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 05:50 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Physics-informed neural networks accelerate power system state estimation by incorporating physical laws into the loss function.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
By incorporating the physical laws of power systems as prior knowledge into the PINN loss function, the proposed method significantly reduces the computational complexity associated with state estimation while maintaining high accuracy, achieving up to 11% increase in accuracy, 75% reduction in standard deviation of results, and 30% faster convergence on the IEEE 14-bus system.
What carries the argument
Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) that embed power system physical laws directly into the neural network loss function to guide the state estimation process.
Load-bearing premise
Physical laws of the power system can be incorporated as prior knowledge into the PINN loss function in a way that yields reliable improvements without requiring system-specific tuning or introducing bias from incomplete measurements.
What would settle it
Replicating the experiments on the IEEE 14-bus system and finding that the PINN method does not achieve at least an 11% accuracy increase, 75% reduction in standard deviation, or 30% faster convergence compared to traditional state estimation techniques.
Figures
read the original abstract
State estimation is the cornerstone of the power system control center since it provides the operating condition of the system in consecutive time intervals. This work investigates the application of physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) for accelerating power systems state estimation in monitoring the operation of power systems. Traditional state estimation techniques often rely on iterative algorithms that can be computationally intensive, particularly for large-scale power systems. In this paper, a novel approach that leverages the inherent physical knowledge of power systems through the integration of PINNs is proposed. By incorporating physical laws as prior knowledge, the proposed method significantly reduces the computational complexity associated with state estimation while maintaining high accuracy. The proposed method achieves up to 11% increase in accuracy, 75% reduction in standard deviation of results, and 30% faster convergence, as demonstrated by comprehensive experiments on the IEEE 14-bus system.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes using physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) to accelerate power system state estimation by embedding physical laws (power-flow equations and measurement models) as prior knowledge in the neural network loss function. Traditional iterative methods are contrasted with this approach, which is claimed to reduce computational complexity while preserving accuracy. Experiments on the IEEE 14-bus system are reported to yield up to 11% higher accuracy, 75% lower standard deviation, and 30% faster convergence.
Significance. If the performance gains can be shown to arise specifically from the physics residual term, to generalize beyond the single small test case, and to remain robust under realistic measurement configurations, the work would offer a concrete demonstration of domain-informed ML for real-time grid monitoring. The absence of any ablation, baseline specification, or sensitivity analysis in the current manuscript prevents assessment of whether these gains are load-bearing or reproducible.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claims (11% accuracy increase, 75% std reduction, 30% faster convergence) are stated without any description of the baseline estimator, the precise form of the PINN loss (which power-flow or measurement equations appear as residuals), the measurement noise model, or the statistical test used to establish significance. These omissions make the headline result impossible to verify or reproduce.
- [Experiments] Experiments section: no ablation is presented that removes or scales the physics-informed loss term while holding network architecture, optimizer, and training data fixed. Without this isolation, it is impossible to determine whether the reported gains are attributable to the incorporation of physical laws or to other uncontrolled factors.
- [Experiments] Experiments section: results are shown only for the IEEE 14-bus system under a single (unspecified) measurement configuration. No variation of PMU/SCADA coverage, noise levels, or system size is reported, leaving the claim that the method requires “no system-specific tuning” unsupported.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract refers to “comprehensive experiments” but supplies no table or figure that would allow a reader to inspect the raw accuracy, std, or iteration counts.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their constructive comments. We address each major comment below and will revise the manuscript to improve verifiability and completeness.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claims (11% accuracy increase, 75% std reduction, 30% faster convergence) are stated without any description of the baseline estimator, the precise form of the PINN loss (which power-flow or measurement equations appear as residuals), the measurement noise model, or the statistical test used to establish significance. These omissions make the headline result impossible to verify or reproduce.
Authors: We agree the abstract would benefit from added context. In the revision we will expand it to name the baseline (weighted least-squares iterative solver), note that the PINN loss includes power-flow equations and measurement residuals, specify the Gaussian measurement noise model, and clarify that improvements are quantified via mean and standard deviation across repeated runs. revision: yes
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Referee: [Experiments] Experiments section: no ablation is presented that removes or scales the physics-informed loss term while holding network architecture, optimizer, and training data fixed. Without this isolation, it is impossible to determine whether the reported gains are attributable to the incorporation of physical laws or to other uncontrolled factors.
Authors: This point is well taken. The current comparisons are against traditional solvers but lack an explicit ablation of the physics residual. We will add such an ablation in the revised experiments, training identical networks with and without the physics term to isolate its contribution. revision: yes
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Referee: [Experiments] Experiments section: results are shown only for the IEEE 14-bus system under a single (unspecified) measurement configuration. No variation of PMU/SCADA coverage, noise levels, or system size is reported, leaving the claim that the method requires “no system-specific tuning” unsupported.
Authors: Experiments are reported on the standard IEEE 14-bus benchmark with the measurement configuration and noise levels detailed in the experiments section. The method embeds the system physics directly and therefore requires no per-system hyperparameter retuning beyond architecture choice. We will clarify the measurement setup in the revision and add an explicit limitations paragraph on the single-system scope; extending to multiple sizes and configurations would require further experiments. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No derivation chain or equations present; claims are purely empirical.
full rationale
The manuscript reports empirical performance gains from applying PINNs to state estimation on the IEEE 14-bus test case. No equations, loss-function definitions, derivation steps, or self-citations appear in the provided text that could reduce any claimed result to its own inputs by construction. The central assertions (accuracy lift, convergence speed) are presented as experimental outcomes without an accompanying analytical chain that could be inspected for circularity.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Power system state estimation can be formulated as an optimization problem solvable by neural networks with physics constraints.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
D. Mukherjee, S. Chakraborty, and S. Ghosh, ``Power system state forecasting using machine learning techniques,'' Electrical Engineering, vol. 104, no. 1, pp. 283--305, 2022
work page 2022
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[4]
B. Huang and J. Wang, ``Applications of physics-informed neural networks in power systems-a review,'' IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 2022
work page 2022
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[5]
K. R. Mestav, J. Luengo-Rozas, and L. Tong, ``Bayesian state estimation for unobservable distribution systems via deep learning,'' IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, vol. 34, no. 6, pp. 4910--4920, 2019
work page 2019
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[7]
A. S. Zamzam and N. D. Sidiropoulos, ``Physics-aware neural networks for distribution system state estimation,'' IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, vol. 35, no. 6, pp. 4347--4356, 2020
work page 2020
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[8]
Physics-informed graphical neural network for pa- rameter & state estimations in power systems,
L. Pagnier and M. Chertkov, ``Physics-informed graphical neural network for parameter & state estimations in power systems,'' arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.06349, 2021
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[9]
P. Demetriou, M. Asprou, J. Quiros-Tortos, and E. Kyriakides, ``Dynamic ieee test systems for transient analysis,'' IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 2108--2117, 2017
work page 2017
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[11]
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discussion (0)
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