scholarly journals Distributed Finite-Time Secondary Frequency and Voltage Restoration Control Scheme of an Islanded AC Microgrid

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (19) ◽  
pp. 6266
Author(s):  
Junjie Ma ◽  
Xudong Wang ◽  
Siyan Zhang ◽  
Hanying Gao

To solve the problems of frequency and voltage deviation caused by the droop control while meeting the requirements of rapid response, a distributed finite-time secondary control scheme is presented. Unlike the traditional cooperative controllers, this scheme is fully distributed; each unit only needs to communicate with its immediate neighbors. A control protocol for frequency restoration and active power sharing is proposed to synchronize the frequency of each unit to the reference value, and achieve accurate active power distribution in a finite-time manner as well. The mismatch of the line impedance is considered, and a consensus-based adaptive virtual impedance control is proposed. The associated voltage drop is considered to be the compensator for the voltage regulation. Then, a distributed finite-time protocol for voltage restoration is designed. The finite-time convergence property and the upper bound of convergence times are guaranteed with rigorous Lyapunov proofs. Case studies in MATLAB are carried out, and the results demonstrate the effectiveness, the robustness to load changes, plug-and play capacity, and better convergence performance of the proposed control scheme.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 6734-6739
Author(s):  
A. Abu Bakar ◽  
E. Pathan ◽  
M. K. Khan ◽  
M. A. Sadiq ◽  
M. I. Rabani ◽  
...  

Parallel connected inverters in islanded mode, are getting momentous attention due to their ability to increase the power distribution and reliability of a power system. When there are different ratings of Distributed Generation (DG) units, they will operate in parallel connection due to different output voltages, impedance mismatch, or different phase that can cause current to flow between DG units. The magnitude of this circulating current sometimes can be very large and damage the DG inverters and also cause power losses that affect power-sharing accuracy, power quality, and the efficiency of the Microgrid (MG) system. Droop control, improved droop control, and virtual impedance control techniques and modifications in the virtual impedance control technique are widely used to suppress the circulating current. However, the addition of the virtual impedance to each inverter to compensate the output impedance is resistive or inductive in nature. The resistive nature of the output impedance always causes a certain voltage drop, whereas the inductive nature of the output impedance causes phase delay for the output voltage. Both problems are addressed by the proposed control mechanism in this paper. Negative resistance, along with virtual impedance, is utilized in the proposed control strategy. The output impedance is to be maintained as inductive in nature to achieve good load sharing in droop control MGs. The simulation results validate the proposed control scheme.


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-19
Author(s):  
Phuong Minh Le ◽  
Huy Minh Nguyen ◽  
Hoa Thi Xuan Pham ◽  
Tho Quang Tran

This paper presents a new load sharing technique for parallel-connected three-phase inverters in Standelone Microgrid. The paper proposed improvements droop controller to accurate load share by ratio with rated power of the inverter. In addition, the proposed scheme ensures reduced load voltage droop due to the load and droop. In the paper, the active power and reactive power are divided by voltage regulation under reference voltage in conditions of stark difference between line impedances, In addition the paper presents the ability to overcome the disadvantages of traditional droop scheme. The proposed model is simulated by Matlab-Simulink for 3 parallel-connected threephase inverters. The simulation results proved the technical soundness and advantages of the proposed in comparision with a tradition scheme even if the output impedance is resistance reactance in power sharing and load voltage drop reduce problems.


2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (11) ◽  
pp. 5272-5282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinwei He ◽  
Yun Wei Li ◽  
Josep M. Guerrero ◽  
Frede Blaabjerg ◽  
Juan C. Vasquez

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elutunji Buraimoh ◽  
Innocent E. Davidson ◽  
Fernando Martinez-Rodrigo

In this study, a distributed secondary control is proposed alongside the conventional primary control to form a hierarchical control scheme for the Low Voltage Ride-Through (LVRT) control and applications in the inverter-based microgrid. The secondary control utilizes a fast Delayed Signal Cancelation (DSC) algorithm for the secondary control loop to control the reactive and active power reference by controlling the sequences generated. The microgrid consists of four Distributed Energy Resources (DER) sources interfaced to the grid through interfacing inverters coordinated by droop for effective power-sharing according to capacities. The droop also allows for grid supporting application for microgrid’s participation in frequency and voltage regulation in the main grid. The proposed decentralized fast DSC performance is evaluated with centralized secondary and traditional primary control using OPAL-RT Lab computation and MATLAB/SIMULINK graphical user interface for offline simulations and real-time digital simulator verification. This study presents and discusses the results.


2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-28
Author(s):  
Phuong Minh Le ◽  
Dai Tan Le ◽  
Hoa Thi Xuan Pham

This paper presents a new method for controling parallel inverters to share active power and reactive power in the energy system with non-linear loads. In these systems, the virtual output impedance is usually added to the control loop of each inverter to improve the active power and reactive power sharing as well as the quality of the voltage system. Paper also proposes a kind of virtual impedance as a second-order general-integrator (SOGI) scheme. The simulation results in Matlab Simulink show the ability of the proposed controller to good share power P-Q, when connected with unbalanced and nonlinear loads. By using the proposed algorithm allows to reduce the voltage THD to 1.9% and 1.2% for unbalanced and nonlinear loads according by comparision with traditional control scheme.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Raton Kumar Nondy ◽  
Md. Abul Bashar ◽  
Prema Nondy ◽  
M. Hazrat Ali

The conventional power frequency (50 or 60 Hz) transformers are economical, highly reliable and quite efficient but they suffer with certain drawbacks like sensitive to harmonics, voltage drop under load, no protection from system disruptions and overloads, poor performance under dc offset load unbalances and no scope to improve power factor. These transformers with copper wound wires on iron cores are unable to respond to control signals as power generations become distributed and intermittent. So, the need of electronic based regulated power supply with software based remote intelligence has become essential. Also, to easily connect the new energy sources to the grid and to improve the power quality by harmonic filtering, voltage sag correction and highly dynamic control of the power flow, a new type of transformer based on power electronics, known as SST has been introduced. The SST realizes voltage transformation, galvanic isolation, power quality improvements such as instantaneous voltage regulation, voltage sag compensation and power factor correction. It is a collection of high-powered semiconductor components, high frequency power transformer and control circuitry which is used to provide a high level of flexible control to power distribution networks. The SST is a high frequency switched Power Electronic Devices (PEDs) based transformer with high controllability that enables flexible connectivity between existing medium voltage power distribution network, low voltage AC residential system and envisioned DC residential system. In this paper a systematic constructional detail of a SST with a power rating of 2 kVA, operating frequency of 20 kHz and voltage rating of 600/60 V as a scaled-down prototype used for power converter topologies is presented. The design is simple and it avoids the difficulty of choosing massive amounts of empirical parameters.


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