Title :
Frequency stability for distributed generation connected through grid-tie inverter
Author :
Glover, E. ; Chung-Ching Chang ; Gorinevsky, Dimitry ; Lall, Sanjay
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fDate :
Oct. 30 2012-Nov. 2 2012
Abstract :
Conventional power generation systems rely on the rotating inertia of large synchronous generators to maintain stability in the power balance and frequency control loops. The increasing penetration of inverter-connected distributed generation proportionally reduces the fraction of conventional stabilized power used in the distribution system. It is an open question whether the primary feedback loop related to frequency control would remain stable as the fraction of the distributed generation increases in a distribution system. We develop and analyze a control model of a grid-connected distribution system to determine the stability in response to disturbances from the grid, such as grid frequency variations. Our conclusion is that for tie-in inverter connection of distributed generation, the transients can remain stable and grid frequency disturbances will not be amplified as long as the inverter controller is well-tuned. This conclusion holds for a broad range of parameter values explored in this work percentage of the distributed generation penetration, power factor of the load, load power, transmission line impedance, LCL filter and PLL in inverter system.
Keywords :
distributed power generation; feedback; frequency control; frequency stability; invertors; machine control; phase locked loops; power generation control; power grids; power system stability; synchronous generators; LCL filter; PLL; distribution system; feedback loop; frequency control loops; frequency stability; grid frequency variations; grid-tie inverter; inverter controller; inverter-connected distributed generation; load power; power balance; power generation systems; synchronous generators; transmission line impedance; Circuit stability; Control systems; Inverters; Phase measurement; Power system stability; Software packages; Stability analysis; Distributed power generation; Power distribution; Power system control Inverters; Power system stability;
Conference_Titel :
Power System Technology (POWERCON), 2012 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Auckland
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2868-5
DOI :
10.1109/PowerCon.2012.6401360