학술논문

Remote Multinodal Voltage Unbalance Compensation in Islanded AC Microgrids
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics IEEE Trans. Power Electron. Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on. 39(3):3052-3063 Mar, 2024
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
MIMO communication
Voltage measurement
Standards
Symmetric matrices
Mathematical models
Power quality
three-phase inverter
voltage unbalance compensation
Language
ISSN
0885-8993
1941-0107
Abstract
Microgrids (MGs) are exposed to voltage quality deterioration due to the presence of voltage unbalance. To deal with this problem, existing solutions based on distributed generation (DG) units interfaced by power electronics offer two type of strategies for voltage unbalance compensation depending on whether the compensation is performed at one remote node or at multiple local nodes. The first type is limited to a single node, and the second type is limited to apply at the DG units output (locally). This article presents a multinodal control scheme where DGs can compensate for voltage unbalance at multiple remote nodes of the MG, thus overcoming both state-of-the-art strategies limitations. In particular, negative-sequence voltage is eliminated at as many remote nodes as the number of available DG's. A systematic approach for the multiple-input/multiple-output (MIMO) nature of the problem is presented covering three aspects. First, a square MIMO control strategy is established and a feasibility test is derived to assess whether the problem can be solved. Second, the cross-coupling interaction between the multiple controllers is minimized by optimally selecting, which DGs will contribute to mitigate the remote unbalances. Third, stability and transient dynamics are analyzed. Laboratory experimental results corroborate the control performance.