13,403 research outputs found

    Management of Distributed Energy Storage Systems for Provisioning of Power Network Services

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    Because of environmentally friendly reasons and advanced technological development, a significant number of renewable energy sources (RESs) have been integrated into existing power networks. The increase in penetration and the uneven allocation of the RESs and load demands can lead to power quality issues and system instability in the power networks. Moreover, high penetration of the RESs can also cause low inertia due to a lack of rotational machines, leading to frequency instability. Consequently, the resilience, stability, and power quality of the power networks become exacerbated. This thesis proposes and develops new strategies for energy storage (ES) systems distributed in power networks for compensating for unbalanced active powers and supply-demand mismatches and improving power quality while taking the constraints of the ES into consideration. The thesis is mainly divided into two parts. In the first part, unbalanced active powers and supply-demand mismatch, caused by uneven allocation and distribution of rooftop PV units and load demands, are compensated by employing the distributed ES systems using novel frameworks based on distributed control systems and deep reinforcement learning approaches. There have been limited studies using distributed battery ES systems to mitigate the unbalanced active powers in three-phase four-wire and grounded power networks. Distributed control strategies are proposed to compensate for the unbalanced conditions. To group households in the same phase into the same cluster, algorithms based on feature states and labelled phase data are applied. Within each cluster, distributed dynamic active power balancing strategies are developed to control phase active powers to be close to the reference average phase power. Thus, phase active powers become balanced. To alleviate the supply-demand mismatch caused by high PV generation, a distributed active power control system is developed. The strategy consists of supply-demand mismatch and battery SoC balancing. Control parameters are designed by considering Hurwitz matrices and Lyapunov theory. The distributed ES systems can minimise the total mismatch of power generation and consumption so that reverse power flowing back to the main is decreased. Thus, voltage rise and voltage fluctuation are reduced. Furthermore, as a model-free approach, new frameworks based on Markov decision processes and Markov games are developed to compensate for unbalanced active powers. The frameworks require only proper design of states, action and reward functions, training, and testing with real data of PV generations and load demands. Dynamic models and control parameter designs are no longer required. The developed frameworks are then solved using the DDPG and MADDPG algorithms. In the second part, the distributed ES systems are employed to improve frequency, inertia, voltage, and active power allocation in both islanded AC and DC microgrids by novel decentralized control strategies. In an islanded DC datacentre microgrid, a novel decentralized control of heterogeneous ES systems is proposed. High- and low frequency components of datacentre loads are shared by ultracapacitors and batteries using virtual capacitive and virtual resistance droop controllers, respectively. A decentralized SoC balancing control is proposed to balance battery SoCs to a common value. The stability model ensures the ES devices operate within predefined limits. In an isolated AC microgrid, decentralized frequency control of distributed battery ES systems is proposed. The strategy includes adaptive frequency droop control based on current battery SoCs, virtual inertia control to improve frequency nadir and frequency restoration control to restore system frequency to its nominal value without being dependent on communication infrastructure. A small-signal model of the proposed strategy is developed for calculating control parameters. The proposed strategies in this thesis are verified using MATLAB/Simulink with Reinforcement Learning and Deep Learning Toolboxes and RTDS Technologies' real-time digital simulator with accurate power networks, switching levels of power electronic converters, and a nonlinear battery model

    Voltage Stabilization in Microgrids via Quadratic Droop Control

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    We consider the problem of voltage stability and reactive power balancing in islanded small-scale electrical networks outfitted with DC/AC inverters ("microgrids"). A droop-like voltage feedback controller is proposed which is quadratic in the local voltage magnitude, allowing for the application of circuit-theoretic analysis techniques to the closed-loop system. The operating points of the closed-loop microgrid are in exact correspondence with the solutions of a reduced power flow equation, and we provide explicit solutions and small-signal stability analyses under several static and dynamic load models. Controller optimality is characterized as follows: we show a one-to-one correspondence between the high-voltage equilibrium of the microgrid under quadratic droop control, and the solution of an optimization problem which minimizes a trade-off between reactive power dissipation and voltage deviations. Power sharing performance of the controller is characterized as a function of the controller gains, network topology, and parameters. Perhaps surprisingly, proportional sharing of the total load between inverters is achieved in the low-gain limit, independent of the circuit topology or reactances. All results hold for arbitrary grid topologies, with arbitrary numbers of inverters and loads. Numerical results confirm the robustness of the controller to unmodeled dynamics.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure

    Review of trends and targets of complex systems for power system optimization

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    Optimization systems (OSs) allow operators of electrical power systems (PS) to optimally operate PSs and to also create optimal PS development plans. The inclusion of OSs in the PS is a big trend nowadays, and the demand for PS optimization tools and PS-OSs experts is growing. The aim of this review is to define the current dynamics and trends in PS optimization research and to present several papers that clearly and comprehensively describe PS OSs with characteristics corresponding to the identified current main trends in this research area. The current dynamics and trends of the research area were defined on the basis of the results of an analysis of the database of 255 PS-OS-presenting papers published from December 2015 to July 2019. Eleven main characteristics of the current PS OSs were identified. The results of the statistical analyses give four characteristics of PS OSs which are currently the most frequently presented in research papers: OSs for minimizing the price of electricity/OSs reducing PS operation costs, OSs for optimizing the operation of renewable energy sources, OSs for regulating the power consumption during the optimization process, and OSs for regulating the energy storage systems operation during the optimization process. Finally, individual identified characteristics of the current PS OSs are briefly described. In the analysis, all PS OSs presented in the observed time period were analyzed regardless of the part of the PS for which the operation was optimized by the PS OS, the voltage level of the optimized PS part, or the optimization goal of the PS OS.Web of Science135art. no. 107
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