5,421 research outputs found
Real-Time Local Volt/VAR Control Under External Disturbances with High PV Penetration
Volt/var control (VVC) of smart PV inverter is becoming one of the most
popular solutions to address the voltage challenges associated with high PV
penetration. This work focuses on the local droop VVC recommended by the grid
integration standards IEEE1547, rule21 and addresses their major challenges
i.e. appropriate parameters selection under changing conditions, and the
control being vulnerable to instability (or voltage oscillations) and
significant steady state error (SSE). This is achieved by proposing a two-layer
local real-time adaptive VVC that has two major features i.e. a) it is able to
ensure both low SSE and control stability simultaneously without compromising
either, and b) it dynamically adapts its parameters to ensure good performance
in a wide range of external disturbances such as sudden cloud cover, cloud
intermittency, and substation voltage changes. A theoretical analysis and
convergence proof of the proposed control is also discussed. The proposed
control is implementation friendly as it fits well within the integration
standard framework and depends only on the local bus information. The
performance is compared with the existing droop VVC methods in several
scenarios on a large unbalanced 3-phase feeder with detailed secondary side
modeling.Comment: IEEE Transactions on Smart Grid, 201
Overview of increasing the penetration of renewable energy sources in the distribution grid by developing control strategies and using ancillary services
Increasing the renewables energy resources in the distribution network is one of the main challenges of the distributed system operator due to instability, power quality and feeder capacity problems. This paper proposes a solution for further penetration of distributed energy resources, by developing control strategies and using ancillary services. Besides the penetration issues, the control strategies will mitigate power quality problems, voltage unbalance and will increase the immunity of the grid by provision of fault ride through capabilities
International White Book on DER Protection : Review and Testing Procedures
This white book provides an insight into the issues surrounding the impact of increasing levels of DER on the generator and network protection and the resulting necessary improvements in protection testing practices. Particular focus is placed on ever increasing inverter-interfaced DER installations and the challenges of utility network integration. This white book should also serve as a starting point for specifying DER protection testing requirements and procedures. A comprehensive review of international DER protection practices, standards and recommendations is presented. This is accompanied by the identiïŹ cation of the main performance challenges related to these protection schemes under varied network operational conditions and the nature of DER generator and interface technologies. Emphasis is placed on the importance of dynamic testing that can only be delivered through laboratory-based platforms such as real-time simulators, integrated substation automation infrastructure and ïŹ exible, inverter-equipped testing microgrids. To this end, the combination of ïŹ exible network operation and new DER technologies underlines the importance of utilising the laboratory testing facilities available within the DERlab Network of Excellence. This not only informs the shaping of new protection testing and network integration practices by end users but also enables the process of de-risking new DER protection technologies. In order to support the issues discussed in the white paper, a comparative case study between UK and German DER protection and scheme testing practices is presented. This also highlights the level of complexity associated with standardisation and approval mechanisms adopted by different countries
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Secure High DER Penetration Power Distribution Via Autonomously Coordinated Volt/VAR Control
Traditionally voltage control in distribution power system (DPS) is performed through voltage regulating devices (VRDs) including on load tap changers (OLTCs), step voltage regulators (SVRs), and switched capacitor banks (SCBs). The recent IEEE 1547-2018 from March 2018 requires inverter fed distributed energy resources (DERs) to contribute reactive power to support the grid voltage. To accommodate VAR from DERs, well-organized control algorithm is required to use in this mode to avoid grid oscillations and unintended switching operations of VRDs. This paper presents two voltage control strategies (i) static voltage control considering voltage-reactive power mode (IEEE 1547-2018), (ii) dynamic and extensive voltage control with maximum utilization of DER capacity and system stability. Further, effective time-graded control is implemented between VRDs and DER units to reduce the simultaneous and negative operation. The proposed voltage control strategies are tested in a realistic 140-bus southern California distribution power system through extensive time-domain simulation studies. The results show that voltage quality in a distribution system is effectively achieved through the proposed voltage control strategies with a significantly reduction in the number of switching operations of VRDs. In addition, proposed voltage control strategies increase reliability and security of the DPS during unexpected failures
Distributed photovoltaic systems: Utility interface issues and their present status. Intermediate/three-phase systems
The interface issues between the intermediate-size Power Conditioning Subsystem (PCS) and the utility are considered. A literature review yielded facts about the status of identified issues
Effects of energy storage systems grid code requirements on interface protection performances in low voltage networks
The ever-growing penetration of local generation in distribution networks and the large diffusion of energy storage systems (ESSs) foreseen in the near future are bound to affect the effectiveness of interface protection systems (IPSs), with negative impact on the safety of medium voltage (MV) and low voltage (LV) systems. With the scope of preserving the main network stability, international and national grid connection codes have been updated recently. Consequently, distributed generators (DGs) and storage units are increasingly called to provide stabilizing functions according to local voltage and frequency. This can be achieved by suitably controlling the electronic power converters interfacing small-scale generators and storage units to the network. The paper focuses on the regulating functions required to storage units by grid codes currently in force in the European area. Indeed, even if such regulating actions would enable local units in participating to network stability under normal steady-state operating conditions,
it is shown through dynamic simulations that they may increase the risk of unintentional islanding occurrence. This means that dangerous operating conditions may arise in LV networks in case dispersed generators and storage systems are present, even if all the end-users are compliant with currently applied connection standards
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EcoBlock: Grid Impacts, Scaling, and Resilience
Widespread deployment of EcoBlocks has the potential to transform today's electricity system into one that is more resilient, flexible, efficient and sustainable. In this vision, the system will consist of self- su cient, renewable-powered, block-scale entities that can deliberately adjust their net power exchange and can optimize performance, maintain stability, support each other, or disconnect entirely from the grid as needed. This report is intended as an independent analysis of the potential relationships, both constructive and adverse, between EcoBlocks and the grid
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