학술논문

Mitigating the impact of distributed generation and fault current limiter on directional overcurrent relay coordination by adaptive protection scheme
Document Type
Conference
Source
2019 IEEE International Conference on Environment and Electrical Engineering and 2019 IEEE Industrial and Commercial Power Systems Europe (EEEIC / I&CPS Europe) Environment and Electrical Engineering and 2019 IEEE Industrial and Commercial Power Systems Europe (EEEIC / I&CPS Europe), 2019 IEEE International Conference on. :1-6 Jun, 2019
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineering Profession
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Fault currents
Impedance
Protective relaying
Circuit faults
Optimization
Distributed power generation
Adaptive protection scheme
directional overcurrent relay coordination
distributed generation
differential evolution multi-objective algorithm
fault current limiter
smart grid.
Language
Abstract
Overcurrent protection principle are mostly coordinated offline according to maximum load and fault currents on dominant topology. However, the traditional networks have been evolving gradually toward reliable and sustainable Smart Grid (SG) in which Distributed Generation (DG) (whether its coal based or renewable) is a vital component. Challenges have come along with advantages of DGs on protective relays such as coordination loss, which leads to several researching proposals to mitigate the impacts of DGs in modern networks. One of the many is the use of Fault Current Limiter (FCL) to lessen DG impacts, but since FCLs come with high cost to completely restore protective relay performance. Adaptive Protection Scheme (APS) exploiting the advance features of SG appear as an efficient solution to confront new challenges related to DGs and FCLs. The impacts of DGs and FCLs before and after employing APS are presented using the interconnected 6 bus system. Results have shown that APS can adequately integrate both DGs and FCLs with no adverse effects.