DocumentCode
1588454
Title
A methodology to study the impact of an increasingly nonconventional load mix on primary frequency control
Author
Omara, Hisham ; Bouffard, François
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Univ. of Manchester, Manchester, UK
fYear
2009
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
The last three decades have experienced an impressive growth in loads interfacing with the grid through power electronic devices. These include personal computers and most office equipment as well as industrial induction motors driven by variable frequency drives. The increasing importance of these non-conventional loads has an impact which is yet to be quantified and modeled systematically. This is particularly the case with the natural load-side frequency response, and this lack of knowledge compounds with the current uncertainty in the characterization of the load´s natural behavior under frequency disturbances. This paper provides a research roadmap to address this question in a rigorous manner. We propose a bottom-up modeling approach which should provide a deeper understanding of this impact and inform on the way power systems operate under a highly nonconventional load mix during transient frequency events.
Keywords
frequency control; induction motor drives; machine control; power system control; power system transients; variable speed drives; bottom-up modeling approach; industrial induction motor; natural load-side frequency response; nonconventional load mix; power electronic device; power system transient; primary frequency control; variable frequency drive; Computer industry; Drives; Electrical equipment industry; Frequency control; Frequency response; Induction motors; Microcomputers; Power electronics; Power system modeling; Power system transients; Load-frequency sensitivity; load modeling; nonconventional load; power electronics; primary frequency control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power & Energy Society General Meeting, 2009. PES '09. IEEE
Conference_Location
Calgary, AB
ISSN
1944-9925
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-4241-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PES.2009.5275686
Filename
5275686
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