277 research outputs found

    Microgrid, Its Control and Stability: The State of The Art

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    Some of the challenges facing the power industries globally include power quality and stability, diminishing fossil fuel, climate change amongst others. The use of distributed generators however is growing at a steady pace to address these challenges. When interconnected and integrated with storage devices and controllable load, these generators operate together in a grid, which has incidental stability and control issues. The focus of this paper, therefore, is on the review and discussion of the different control approaches and the hierarchical control on a microgrid, the current practice in the literature concerning stability and the control techniques deployed for microgrid control; the weakness and strength of the different control strategies were discussed in this work and some of the areas that require further research are highlighted

    Secondary restoration control of islanded microgrids with a decentralized event-triggered strategy

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    Cost-Based Droop Schemes for Economic Dispatch in Islanded Microgrids

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    In this paper, cost-based droop schemes are proposed, to minimize the total active power generation cost in an islanded microgrid (MG), while the simplicity and decentralized nature of the droop control are retained. In cost-based droop schemes, the incremental costs of distributed generators (DGs) are embedded into the droop schemes, where the incremental cost is a derivative of the DG cost function with respect to output power. In the steady state, DGs share a single common frequency, and cost-based droop schemes equate incremental costs of DGs, thus minimizing the total active power generation cost, in terms of the equal incremental cost principle. Finally, simulation results in an islanded MG with high a penetration of intermittent renewable energy sources are presented, to demonstrate the effectiveness, as well as plug and play capability of the cost-based droop schemes.Feixiong Chen, Minyou Chen, Qiang Li, Kaikai Meng, Yongwei Zheng, Josep M. Guerrero, Derek Abbot

    Review on Control of DC Microgrids and Multiple Microgrid Clusters

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    This paper performs an extensive review on control schemes and architectures applied to dc microgrids (MGs). It covers multilayer hierarchical control schemes, coordinated control strategies, plug-and-play operations, stability and active damping aspects, as well as nonlinear control algorithms. Islanding detection, protection, and MG clusters control are also briefly summarized. All the mentioned issues are discussed with the goal of providing control design guidelines for dc MGs. The future research challenges, from the authors' point of view, are also provided in the final concluding part

    Priority-driven self-optimizing power control scheme for interlinking converters of hybrid AC/DC microgrid clusters in decentralized manner

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    Hybrid AC/DC microgrid clusters are key building blocks of smart grid to support sustainable and resilient urban power systems. In microgrid clusters, the subgrid load-priorities and power quality requirements for different areas vary significantly. To realize optimal power exchanges among microgrid clusters, this paper proposes a decentralized self-optimizing power control scheme for interlinking converters (ILC) of hybrid microgrid clusters. A priority-driven optimal power exchange model of ILCs is built considering the priorities and capacities in subgrids. The optimization objective is to minimize the total DC-voltage/AC-frequency state deviations of subgrids. To realize the decentralized power flow control, an optimal-oriented quasi-droop control strategy of ILCs is introduced to not only achieve a flexible self-optimizing power flow management, but also provide an ancillary function of voltage support. Consequently, as each of ILCs only monitors the local AC-side frequency and DC-side voltage signals, the whole optimal power control of the wide-area microgrid clusters is achieved in a decentralized manner without any communication link. Thus, the proposed control algorithm has the features of decreased cost, increased scalability, reduced geographic restrictions and high resilience in terms of communication faults. Finally, the proposed method is validated by case studies with four interconnected microgrids through hardware-in-loop tests

    Modeling, control and design of AC microgrids in islanded mode

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    Tesi per compendi de publicacions, amb diferents seccions retallades pels dret de l'editorPremi Extraordinari de Doctorat, promoció 2018-2019. Àmbit de les TICThe present doctoral thesis is focused on the analysis and design of control strategies for the secondary control layer of islanded AC microgrids without the use of communications. The work is submitted as a compendium of publications, composed by journals and international conference papers. The first contribution is a control strategy for the secondary control layer based on a switchable configuration, that does not require the use of communications. For stability analysis purposes, a closed-loop system modeling is presented, which is also used to determine design considerations for the control parameters. The second contribution is a complementary control strategy that improves the frequency regulation of the previous proposed control, using a dynamic droop gain in the primary layer. For this purpose, a time protocol that drives the variable parameters is proposed which guarantees an effectively reduction of the maximum frequency error without relying on complex techniques, maintaining the simplicity of the basis strategy and the non-use of communications. The third contribution is a multi-layer hierarchical control scheme that is composed by a droop-based primary layer, a time-driven secondary layer and an optimized power dispatch tertiary layer. The proposed control guarantees an excellent performance in terms of frequency restoration and power sharing. The fourth contribution is an improved secondary control layer strategy without communications, which presents superior operating performance compared with the previous proposals. The scheme is based on a event-driven operation of a parameter-varying filter which ensures perfect active power sharing and controllable accuracy for frequency restoration. A complete modeling that considers the topology of the MG and the electrical interaction between the DGs is derived for the stability analysis and to determine design guidelines for the key control parameters. For the purpose of analyzing and verifying the operational performance of the control schemes, an experimental MG was implemented, where selected tests were carried out. The obtained results are discussed and its relation with the doctoral thesis objectives analyzed. The thesis ends presenting conclusions and future research lines.La presente tesis doctoral se enfoca en el análisis y diseño de estrategias de control para la capa de control secundaria en microrredes aisladas de corriente alterna, sin el uso de comunicaciones. El trabajo se presenta en la modalidad de compendio, por lo que está compuesto por publicaciones previamente aceptadas en revistas y congresos científicos internacionales. La primera contribución es un estrategia de control para la capa secundaria basada en una configuración conmutable, que no requiere el uso de comunicaciones. Con el propósito de analizar la estabilidad, se presenta el modelado del sistema de lazo cerrado, que también es usado para determinar reglas de diseño de los parámetros de control. La segunda contribución es una estrategia de control complementaria que mejora la regulación de frecuencia de la propuesta anterior, usando una ganancia dinámica en la capa de control primaria. Se propone la variación de los parámetros siguiendo un protocolo de tiempo, garantizando la reducción del error máximo de frecuencia sin depender de técnicas complejas, manteniendo la simplicidad de la estrategia base y sin requerir comunicaciones. La tercera contribución es un esquema de control jerárquico compuesto por una capa primaria basada en el método de la pendiente, una capa secundaria controlada por un protocolo de tiempo y una capa terciaria que optimiza el despacho de potencias. El control propuesto garantiza un excelente desempeño en términos de la regulación de la frecuencia y la compartición de potencias. La cuarta contribución es una estrategia de control para la capa secundaria que no usa comunicaciones, la cual presenta un comportamiento operativo superior comparado con las propuestas anteriores. El esquema está basado en una operación controlada por eventos, de un filtro con parámetros variables que garantiza una perfecta compartición de potencias y una precisa restauración de frecuencia. Además, para el análisis de la estabilidad y la determinación de pautas de diseño de los parámetros se presenta un modelo que considera la topología de la microrred y las interacciones eléctricas de los generadores. Con el objetivo de analizar y verificar el desempeño operativo de los esquemas de control, se implementó una microrred experimental donde se llevaron a cabo las pruebas requeridas. Se discutieron los resultados obtenidos y se analizó su relación con los objetivos de la tesis doctoral. El documento termina presentado las conclusiones así como futuras líneas de investigaciónAward-winningPostprint (published version

    Advanced Analysis and Control Methods of AC Microgrids for Power Sharing Performance Improvement

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    Networked and Distributed Control Method with Optimal Power Dispatch for Islanded Microgrids

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    In this paper, a two-layer network and distributed control method is proposed, where there is a top-layer communication network over a bottom-layer microgrid. The communication network consists of two subgraphs, in which the first is composed of all agents, while the second is only composed of controllable agents. The distributed control laws derived from the first subgraph guarantee the supply-demand balance, while further control laws from the second subgraph reassign the outputs of controllable distributed generators, which ensure active and reactive power are dispatched optimally. However, for reducing the number of edges in the second subgraph, generally a simpler graph instead of a fully connected graph is adopted. In this case, a near-optimal dispatch of active and reactive power can be obtained gradually, only if controllable agents on the second subgraph calculate set points iteratively according to our proposition. Finally, the method is evaluated over seven cases via simulation. The results show that the system performs as desired, even if environmental conditions and load demand fluctuate significantly. In summary, the method can rapidly respond to fluctuations resulting in optimal power sharing
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