Title :
Steady-State Analysis of Maximum Photovoltaic Penetration Levels on Typical Distribution Feeders
Author :
Hoke, Anderson ; Butler, R. ; Hambrick, Joshua ; Kroposki, Benjamin
Author_Institution :
Nat. Renewable Energy Lab., Golden, CO, USA
fDate :
4/1/2013 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper presents simulation results for a taxonomy of typical distribution feeders with various levels of photovoltaic (PV) penetration. For each of the 16 feeders simulated, the maximum PV penetration that did not result in a steady-state voltage or current violation is presented for several PV location scenarios: clustered near the feeder source, clustered near the midpoint of the feeder, clustered near the end of the feeder, randomly located, and evenly distributed. In addition, the maximum level of PV is presented for single, large PV systems at each location. Maximum PV penetration was determined by requiring that feeder voltages stay within ANSI Range A and that feeder currents stay within the ranges determined by overcurrent protection devices. Generation ramp rates, protection and coordination, and other factors that may impact maximum PV penetrations are not considered here. Simulations were run in GridLAB-D using hourly time steps over a year with randomized load profiles based on utility data and typical meteorological year weather data. For 86% of the 336 cases simulated, maximum PV penetration was at least 30% of peak load.
Keywords :
distributed power generation; overcurrent protection; photovoltaic power systems; power distribution protection; power generation protection; ANSI Range A; GridLAB-D; current violation; distribution feeders; feeder currents; generation ramp rates; load profiles; maximum photovoltaic penetration levels; overcurrent protection devices; steady state analysis; Load modeling; Photovoltaic systems; Reactive power; Steady-state; Taxonomy; Distributed power generation; photovoltaic (PV) systems; power distribution; power system simulation;
Journal_Title :
Sustainable Energy, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSTE.2012.2225115