1,101 research outputs found

    Analysis of the Component- and Control System Application of a Hydropower- and PV Based DC Microgrid Designed for Electrifying Land-Based Industries in Norway

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    The Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate reports that a significant share of Norway’s greenhouse gas emissions originates from burning fossil fuelsin the land-based industry. Although some electrification and energy cuts have been initiated, the current technology for further electrification, particularly chemical industries, is classified as “immature”. The electrification development of such industries is recognized as a critical step in reducing Norway’s land-based industry’s carbon footprint. However, this requires considerable investments in the public grid. Intending to address this, the thesis attains the NWA concept by proposing a hydropower- and PV based DC microgrid structure using hybrid energy storage. The software MATLAB Simulink is used to design, model, and simulate the microgrid. The model covers a 100 kW PV system, an 85 kVA rated salient pole synchronous generator and an energy storage system incorporating either exclusively a battery system or in conjunction with a supercapacitor system. This system undertakes three modes of operation, simulated for two different load cases with different demand responses. The goal is to determine a control system- and component applications that satisfy a predetermined stability requirement while sharing out the power contributions to saturate the load demand. For the first two modes of operation, the DC bus is controlled by the HES system, whereas the generator operates first with constant rotation and field voltage, and then with an excitation system. In the third mode of operation, the DC bus is controlled by the generator system, while the battery system is tasked with saturating the remaining load demand. The thesis concludes that the proposed system shows promising characteristics for electrifying land-based industry, and the obtained robustness in the control system is satisfactory for selected component applications. Moreover, the system can somewhat attain the NWA concept, although the obstacle of safeguarding energy storage capacity must be overcome to practically implement it

    Electric Vehicles Charging Stations’ Architectures, Criteria, Power Converters, and Control Strategies in Microgrids

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    Electric Vehicles (EV) usage is increasing over the last few years due to a rise in fossil fuel prices and the rate of increasing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. The EV charging stations are powered by the existing utility power grid systems, increasing the stress on the utility grid and the load demand at the distribution side. The DC grid-based EV charging is more efficient than the AC distribution because of its higher reliability, power conversion efficiency, simple interfacing with renewable energy sources (RESs), and integration of energy storage units (ESU). The RES-generated power storage in local ESU is an alternative solution for managing the utility grid demand. In addition, to maintain the EV charging demand at the microgrid levels, energy management and control strategies must carefully power the EV battery charging unit. Also, charging stations require dedicated converter topologies, control strategies and need to follow the levels and standards. Based on the EV, ESU, and RES accessibility, the different types of microgrids architecture and control strategies are used to ensure the optimum operation at the EV charging point. Based on the above said merits, this review paper presents the different RES-connected architecture and control strategies used in EV charging stations. This study highlights the importance of different charging station architectures with the current power converter topologies proposed in the literature. In addition, the comparison of the microgrid-based charging station architecture with its energy management, control strategies, and charging converter controls are also presented. The different levels and types of the charging station used for EV charging, in addition to controls and connectors used in the charging station, are discussed. The experiment-based energy management strategy is developed for controlling the power flow among the available sources and charging terminals for the effective utilization of generated renewable power. The main motive of the EMS and its control is to maximize usage of RES consumption. This review also provides the challenges and opportunities for EV charging, considering selecting charging stations in the conclusion.publishedVersio

    A novel centralized supervisory with distributed control system-based microgrid

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    Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition is a popular control and monitoring scheme and is predominantly used in many industrial systems. Driven by the motivation of extending the usage of the SCADA systems for microgrid, a novel centralized Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition System with Distributed Control Systems is proposed and validated for the microgrid. Supervisory instructions are issued from the central control system, whereas the local controllers are used to implement the exclusive control schemes required for the various subsystems. A wired sensor network is used to monitor the various vital parameters and a Graphical User Interface (GUI) is used for monitoring the status of operation of the various subsystems along with their parametric values. The proposed system is simulated in the MATLAB SIMULINK environment. An experimental verification prototype has also been carried out where a PC (Personal Computer) with a Graphical User Interface developed in C# and a microcontroller is used to act as an interface between the distributed controllers in the plant and the master control PC

    Technical Challenges and Solutions of a three-phase bidirectional two stage Electric Vehicle charger

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    The sustainability of the power grid owing to the building strain of the ever-growing demand for electrical energy urges innovative and more practical solutions that enable active participation of end-users in stable and reliable management of power systems. One of the emerging projections of such a two-way exchange of electrical power between the grid and consumers is the developing field of bidirectional energy trade between power providers and electric vehicle owners. A bidirectional, three-phase, two-stage off-board electric vehicle EV charger design is proposed in this research. The first stage acts as alternating current AC to direct current DC converter during charging operation and behaves as three phase inverter and power factor corrector when energy exchange is from vehicle to grid. The second stage is a bidirectional DC-DC level converter linked to the first stage by a DC bus. The grid side filter is designed to enable the grid interfacing without any significant power quality problems. The proposed design, topology and the devised control infrastructure are tested through simulations on MATLAB/Simulink platform by interfacing the charger to a three-phase AC microgrid and the results approve the performance of the proposed charging topology

    Suppression of Second-Order Harmonic Current for Droop-Controlled Distributed Energy Resource Converters in DC Microgrids

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    Droop-controlled distributed energy resource converters in dc microgrids usually show low output impedances. When coupled with ac systems, second-order harmonics typically appear on the dc-bus voltage, causing significant harmonic currents at the converters resource side. This paper shows how to reduce such undesired currents by means of notch filters and resonant regulators included in the converters control loops. The main characteristics of these techniques in terms of harmonic attenuation and stability are systematically investigated. In particular, it is shown that the voltage control-loop bandwidth is limited to be below twice the line frequency to avoid instability. Then, a modified notch filter and a modified resonant regulator are proposed, allowing to remove the constraint on the voltage loop bandwidth. The resulting methods (i.e., the notch filter, the resonant regulator, and their corresponding modified versions) are evaluated in terms of output impedance and stability. Experimental results from a dc microgrid prototype composed of three dc-dc converters and one dc-ac converter, all with a rated power of 5kW, are reported

    Power Quality Enhancement in Electricity Grids with Wind Energy Using Multicell Converters and Energy Storage

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    In recent years, the wind power industry is experiencing a rapid growth and more wind farms with larger size wind turbines are being connected to the power system. While this contributes to the overall security of electricity supply, large-scale deployment of wind energy into the grid also presents many technical challenges. Most of these challenges are one way or another, related to the variability and intermittent nature of wind and affect the power quality of the distribution grid. Power quality relates to factors that cause variations in the voltage level and frequency as well as distortion in the voltage and current waveforms due to wind variability which produces both harmonics and inter-harmonics. The main motivation behind work is to propose a new topology of the static AC/DC/AC multicell converter to improve the power quality in grid-connected wind energy conversion systems. Serial switching cells have the ability to achieve a high power with lower-size components and improve the voltage waveforms at the input and output of the converter by increasing the number of cells. Furthermore, a battery energy storage system is included and a power management strategy is designed to ensure the continuity of power supply and consequently the autonomy of the proposed system. The simulation results are presented for a 149.2 kW wind turbine induction generator system and the results obtained demonstrate the reduced harmonics, improved transient response, and reference tracking of the voltage output of the wind energy conversion system.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Two new families of high-gain DC-DC power electronic converters for DC-microgrids

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    Distributing the electric power in dc form is an appealing solution in many applications such as telecommunications, data centers, commercial buildings, and microgrids. A high gain dc-dc power electronic converter can be used to individually link low-voltage elements such as solar panels, fuel cells, and batteries to the dc voltage bus which is usually 400 volts. This way, it is not required to put such elements in a series string to build up their voltages. Consequently, each element can function at it optimal operating point regardless of the other elements in the system. In this dissertation, first a comparative study of dc microgrid architectures and their advantages over their ac counterparts is presented. Voltage level selection of dc distribution systems is discussed from the cost, reliability, efficiency, and safety standpoints. Next, a new family of non-isolated high-voltage-gain dc-dc power electronic converters with unidirectional power flow is introduced. This family of converters benefits from a low voltage stress across its switches. The proposed topologies are versatile as they can be utilized as single-input or double-input power converters. In either case, they draw continuous currents from their sources. Lastly, a bidirectional high-voltage-gain dc-dc power electronic converter is proposed. This converter is comprised of a bidirectional boost converter which feeds a switched-capacitor architecture. The switched-capacitor stage suggested here has several advantages over the existing approaches. For example, it benefits from a higher voltage gain while it uses less number of capacitors. The proposed converters are highly efficient and modular. The operating modes, dc voltage gain, and design procedure for each converter are discussed in details. Hardware prototypes have been developed in the lab. The results obtained from the hardware agree with those of the simulation models. --Abstract, page iv

    A control strategy for a distributed power generation microgrid application with voltage and current controlled source converter

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    This paper presents a pseudodroop control structure integrated within a microgrid system through distributed power generation (DPG) modules capable to function in off-grid islanded, genset-connected, and grid-connected modes of operation. System efficiency has an important role in order to harvest the maximum available renewable energy from dc or ac sources while providing power backup capability. A control strategy is proposed in off-grid islanded mode method based on the microgrid line-frequency control as agent of communication for energy control between the DPG modules. A critical case is where the ac load demand could be lower than the available power from the photovoltaic solar array, where the battery bank can be overcharged with unrecoverable damage consequences. The DPG voltage-forming module controls the battery charge algorithm with a frequency-generator function, and the DPG current source module controls its output current through a frequency-detection function. The physical installation between DPG modules is independent, since no additional communication wiring is needed between power modules, which represent another integration advantage within the microgrid-type application

    Topology Derivation and Development of Non-Isolated Three-port Converters for DC Microgrids

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    Currently, three-port converters (TPCs) are gaining popularity in applications which integrate renewable energies, such as photovoltaics and wind, and energy storage elements, such as batteries and supercapacitors with load. This is due to the advantages of a single power conversion stage between any two ports for better conversion efficiency and a highly integrated structure for compactness. Most of the reported TPCs focus on the consuming load. However, there are applications such as hybrid-electric vehicle braking systems and DC microgrids which have power generating capability. A typical example is battery charging in a DC microgrid. When the photovoltaics has inadequate power to charge the battery, the TPCs that consider only consuming load need an extra DC/DC converter for the DC bus to charge the battery. Three-winding transformers associated with full-bridge configurations as the basis for TPCs can fulfill the purpose of bi-directional power flow between any two ports. However, bulkiness of transformers and the need for more switches and associated control mechanisms increases the converter complexity, volume and cost. Solutions for integrating a regenerative load in NITPCs are still limited. This research work focuses on the development of non-isolated three-port converters (NITPCs), as they are capable of driving a regenerative load while offering a compact solution. The study includes a systematic approach to deriving a family of NITPCs. They combine different commonly known power converters in an integrated manner while considering the voltage polarity, voltage levels among the ports and overall voltage conversion ratio. The derived converter topologies allow for all possible power flow combinations among the sources and load while preserving the single power processing feature of the TPC. A design example of a boost converter based TPC with a bi-directional buck converter is reported. In addition, a novel single-inductor NITPC is proposed. It is a further integrated topology according to the aforementioned design example where only one inductor is required instead of two, and the number of power transistors remains the same. The detailed topological derivation, operation principles, steady-state analysis, simulation results and experiment results are given to verify the proposed NITPCs

    Optimum Resilient Operation and Control DC Microgrid Based Electric Vehicles Charging Station Powered by Renewable Energy Sources

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    This paper introduces an energy management and control method for DC microgrid supplying electric vehicles (EV) charging station. An Energy Management System (EMS) is developed to manage and control power flow from renewable energy sources to EVs through DC microgrid. An integrated approach for controlling DC microgrid based charging station powered by intermittent renewable energies. A wind turbine (WT) and solar photovoltaic (PV) arrays are integrated into the studied DC microgrid to replace energy from fossil fuel and decrease pollution from carbon emissions. Due to the intermittency of solar and wind generation, the output powers of PV and WT are not guaranteed. For this reason, the capacities of WT, solar PV panels, and the battery system are considered decision parameters to be optimized. The optimized design of the renewable energy system is done to ensure sufficient electricity supply to the EV charging station. Moreover, various renewable energy technologies for supplying EV charging stations to improve their performance are investigated. To evaluate the performance of the used control strategies, simulation is carried out in MATLAB/SIMULINK. Document type: Articl
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