DocumentCode
17896
Title
Hierarchical Control for Multiple DC-Microgrids Clusters
Author
Shafiee, Qobad ; Dragicevic, Tomislav ; Vasquez, Juan C. ; Guerrero, Josep M.
Author_Institution
Inst. of Energy Technol., Aalborg Univ., Aalborg, Denmark
Volume
29
Issue
4
fYear
2014
fDate
Dec. 2014
Firstpage
922
Lastpage
933
Abstract
This paper presents a distributed hierarchical control framework to ensure reliable operation of dc microgrid (MG) clusters. In this hierarchy, primary control is used to regulate the common bus voltage inside each MG locally. An adaptive droop method is proposed for this level, which determines droop coefficients according to the state-of-charge (SOC) of batteries automatically. A small-signal model is developed to investigate effects of the system parameters, constant power loads, as well as line impedance between the MGs on stability of these systems. In the secondary level, a distributed consensus-based voltage regulator is introduced to eliminate the average voltage deviation over the MGs. This distributed averaging method allows the power flow control between the MGs to be achieved at the same time, as it can be accomplished only at the cost of having voltage deviation inside the system. Another distributed policy is employed then to regulate the power flow among the MGs according to their local SOCs. The proposed distributed controllers on each MG communicate with only the neighbor MGs through a communication infrastructure. Finally, the developed small-signal model is expanded for MG clusters with all the proposed control loops. The effectiveness of the proposed hierarchical scheme is verified through detailed hardware-in-the-loop simulations.
Keywords
distributed power generation; load flow control; power generation control; voltage control; voltage regulators; SOC; adaptive droop method; common bus voltage; communication infrastructure; control loops; distributed consensus-based voltage regulator; distributed hierarchical control framework; hardware-in-the-loop simulations; hierarchical control; multiple DC-microgrids clusters; power flow control; state-of-charge; voltage deviation; Adaptation models; Batteries; Impedance; Load modeling; Stability analysis; System-on-chip; Voltage control; Adaptive droop; dc microgrid (MG); distributed control; hierarchical control; power flow control; stability analysis; voltage control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Energy Conversion, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8969
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TEC.2014.2362191
Filename
6939722
Link To Document