Power Quality of Renewable Energy Source Systems: A New Paradigm of Electrical Grids

Abstract

The power quality delivered by the distribution companies to consumers has always been a relevant issue, especially to industrial consumers, where power quality is directly related to productivity. However, until a few years ago, power quality was mostly synonymous with continuity of service, and the main concern was the minimization of power interruptions. Since the last decade of the twentieth century, power quality has become a strategic issue for all sectors involved in this market, from distribution companies to consumers, with a particular emphasis on industrial consumers as well as equipment manufacturers. The concept of power quality involves a wide range of electromagnetic phenomena that can occur in the power grid. Such changes may occur in different parts of the electrical power system, at customer facilities, or in the distribution network. In recent years, the electric power market has undergone huge transformations, electricity production has become decentralized, and consumers (who can now also be producers) have the opportunity to choose their supplier. The integration of renewable-based microgeneration systems into distribution grids has brought various disturbances to the grid (harmonics, voltage unbalance, voltage fluctuations, frequency deviations, etc.), leading to increasingly degraded power quality. This Special Issue focuses on the analysis of the consequences that renewables-based microgeneration systems have on power networks by finding new solutions for networks management (network optimization models, efficiency, and losses), integrating consumers and micro-producers in order to keep quality parameters at high levels. In this Special Issue, we can see that the interdisciplinarity of these issues is very present among researchers and scholars, who are well aware of the importance and impact that the new paradigm of network management brings in various domains, reflecting on the quality of the contributions submitted. Accordingly, the papers selected for publication cover a wide range of application topics, including electrical mobility, energy storage systems, facility management and control, impact analysis of different types of renewable energy sources, with focus on wind and solar generation, in both low-voltage (LV) and medium-voltage (MV) networks.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

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