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This paper presents a method for controlling the voltage of inverter-based Microgrids by proposing a new scale-free distributed cooperative controller. The communication network is modeled by a general time-varying graph which enhances the resilience of the proposed protocol against communication link failure, data packet loss, and fast plug and play operation in the presence of arbitrarily communication delays. The proposed scale-free distributed cooperative controller is independent of any information about the communication system and the size of the network (i.e., the number of distributed generators). The stability analysis of the proposed protocol is provided. The proposed method is simulated on the CIGRE medium voltage Microgrid test system. The simulation results demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed scale-free distributed nonlinear protocol for regulating the voltage of Microgrids in presence of communication failures, data packet loss, noise, and degradation.
This paper presents a trajectory tracking control strategy that modulates the active power injected by geographically distributed inverter-based resources to support transient stability. Each resource is independently controlled, and its response drives the local bus voltage angle toward a trajectory that tracks the angle of the center of inertia. The center-of-inertia angle is estimated in real time from wide-area measurements. The main objectives are to stabilize transient disturbances and increase the amount of power that can be safely transferred over key transmission paths without loss of synchronism. Here we envision the actuators as utility-scale energy storage systems; however, equivalent examples could be developed for partially-curtailed photovoltaic generation and/or Type 4 wind turbine generators. The strategy stems from a time-varying linearization of the equations of motion for a synchronous machine. The control action produces synchronizing torque in a special reference frame that accounts for the motion of the center of inertia. This drives the system states toward the desired trajectory and promotes rotor angle stability. For testing we employ a reduced-order dynamic model of the North American Western Interconnection. The results show that this approach improves system reliability and can increase capacity utilization on stability-limited transmission corridors.
Quantifying the impact of inverter-based distributed generation (DG) sources on power-flow distribution system cases is arduous. Existing distribution system tools predominately model distributed generation sources as either negative PQ loads or as a PV generator and then employed a PV-PQ switching algorithm to mimic Volt/VAR support. These models neglect the unique characteristics of inverter-based distributed generation sources, have scalability and convergence issues, and are ill-suited for increasing solar penetration scenarios. This work proposes an inverter-based DG model accounting for the inverters topology, sensing position, and control strategies. The model extends recently introduced analytical positive sequence generator models for three-phase studies. The use of circuit-simulation based heuristics help achieve robust convergence. Simulation of the PG&E prototypical feeders using a prototype solver demonstrate the models accuracy and efficacy.
In this paper, a novel model-free wide-area damping control (WADC) method is proposed, which can achieve full decoupling of modes and damp multiple critical inter-area oscillations simultaneously using grid-connected voltage source converters (VSCs). The proposed method is purely measurement based and requires no knowledge of the network topology and the dynamic model parameters. Hence, the designed controller using VSCs can update the control signals online as the system operating condition varies. Numerical studies in the modified IEEE 68-bus system with grid-connected VSCs show that the proposed method can estimate the system dynamic model accurately and can damp inter-area oscillations effectively under different working conditions and network topologies.
In this paper, we consider the problem of optimally coordinating the response of a group of distributed energy resources (DERs) so they collectively meet the electric power demanded by a collection of loads, while minimizing the total generation cost and respecting the DER capacity limits. This problem can be cast as a convex optimization problem, where the global objective is to minimize a sum of convex functions corresponding to individual DER generation cost, while satisfying (i) linear inequality constraints corresponding to the DER capacity limits and (ii) a linear equality constraint corresponding to the total power generated by the DERs being equal to the total power demand. We develop distributed algorithms to solve the DER coordination problem over time-varying communication networks with either bidirectional or unidirectional communication links. The proposed algorithms can be seen as distribute
This paper investigates bilateral control of teleoperators with closed architecture and subjected to arbitrary bounded time-varying delay. A prominent challenge for bilateral control of such teleoperators lies in the closed architecture, especially in the context not involving interaction force/torque measurement. This yields the long-standing situation that most bilateral control rigorously developed in the literature is hard to be justified as applied to teleoperators with closed architecture. With a new class of dynamic feedback, we propose kinematic and adaptive dynamic controllers for teleoperators with closed architecture, and we show that the proposed kinematic and dynamic controllers are robust with respect to arbitrary bounded time-varying delay. In addition, by exploiting the input-output properties of an inverted form of the dynamics of robot manipulators with closed architecture, we remove the assumption of uniform exponential stability of a linear time-varying system due to the adaptation to the gains of the inner controller in demonstrating stability of the presented adaptive dynamic control. The application of the proposed approach is illustrated by the experimental results using a Phantom Omni and a UR10 robot.