학술논문

Virtual Flux Droop Method—A New Control Strategy of Inverters in Microgrids
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics IEEE Trans. Power Electron. Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on. 29(9):4704-4711 Sep, 2014
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Aerospace
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
General Topics for Engineers
Nuclear Engineering
Signal Processing and Analysis
Transportation
Inverters
Voltage control
Vectors
Reactive power
Microgrids
Frequency control
Power system stability
Active and reactive power sharing
flux droop
microgrids
power quality
Language
ISSN
0885-8993
1941-0107
Abstract
The parallel operation of inverters in microgrids is mainly based on the droop method. The conventional voltage droop method consists of adjusting the output voltage frequency and amplitude to achieve autonomous power sharing without control wire interconnections. Nevertheless, the conventional voltage droop method shows several drawbacks, such as complicated inner multiloop feedback control, and most importantly, frequency and voltage deviations. This paper proposes a new control strategy in microgrid applications by drooping the virtual flux instead of the inverter output voltage. First, the relationship between the inverter virtual flux and the active and reactive powers is mathematically obtained. This is used to develop a new flux droop method. In addition, a small-signal model is developed in order to design the main control parameters and study the system dynamics and stability. Furthermore, a direct flux control algorithm is employed to regulate the virtual flux according to the droop controller, which avoids the use of proportional-integral controllers and pulse-width modulation modulators. Both the simulation and experimental results show that the proposed flux droop strategy can achieve active and reactive power sharing with much lower frequency deviation than the conventional voltage droop method, thus highlighting the potential use in microgrid applications.