4.5 Article

Tools for handling steady-state under-frequency regulation in isolated microgrids

Journal

IET RENEWABLE POWER GENERATION
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages 609-617

Publisher

INST ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY-IET
DOI: 10.1049/iet-rpg.2018.5172

Keywords

power generation control; reactive power control; Newton method; voltage control; load flow; optimisation; distributed power generation; power system transient stability; load shedding; generator steady-state governor equations; equality constraints; New England test system; 33; 11-kV radial distribution system; droop-controlled voltage; complementarity constraint-based method; OPF approach; reactive power generation limits; droop-based control; voltage regulation; inequality constraint; system frequency; generators governor equations; optimal PF formulation; reference bus angle; microgrid isolation; under-frequency problem; Newton PF formulation; governor power flow model; isolated microgrids; under-frequency regulation

Funding

  1. CNPq
  2. FAPEMIG
  3. INERGE

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This study presents two approaches to handling under-frequency regulation in isolated microgrids. The first one is a governor power flow (PF) model in which the generators steady-state governor equations are modeled into a full Newton PF formulation resulting in an augmented sparse linearised system of equations to be solved at each iteration. As a result, it is possible to evaluate the under frequency problem in the case of microgrid islanding as well as to set the reference bus angle to evaluate the possibility of reconnection to the main grid. The second approach presents an optimal PF (OPF) formulation in which the generators governor equations are considered as additional equality constraints to determine the minimum amount of load shedding to keep the system frequency between specified limits. In both methods, it is also used an equation that provides voltage regulation in a droop-based control. The reactive power generation limits in the OPF approach are bounded by a proposed complementarity constraint-based method adapted for the generators' droop-controlled terminal voltage. The proposed approaches are evaluated and validated through the study of the EHV1 Network, a 61-bus 33/11-kV radial distribution system, and the New England test system.

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