학술논문

Impact of increased penetration of large-scale PV generation on short-term stability of power systems
Document Type
Conference
Source
2016 IEEE 36th Central American and Panama Convention (CONCAPAN XXXVI) Central American and Panama Convention (CONCAPAN XXXVI), 2016 IEEE 36th. :1-6 Nov, 2016
Subject
Bioengineering
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Engineering Profession
General Topics for Engineers
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Robotics and Control Systems
Signal Processing and Analysis
Transportation
Photovoltaic systems
Contingency management
Stochastic processes
Power system stability
Control systems
Stability analysis
Regulation
Circuit stability
Voltage control
Load modeling
Short-term stability
large-scale PV generation
voltage regulation
reactive power control
Language
Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of increased penetration of large-scale photovoltaic (PV) generation on the short-term stability of the IEEE New England 39-bus test system, considering the stochastic nature of power systems. Based on the probabilistic models of input parameters, such as load variation and the occurrence of contingencies, Monte Carlo-type simulations are performed to iteratively evaluate the system time domain response. Also, different strategies for voltage regulation capabilities for PV systems were analyzed. The simulation results identified both, improvement and detrimental effects on short-term stability with different penetration levels of PV generation. The beneficial or detrimental effects depend on the PV systems operating mode, whether or not including voltage regulation. Greater instability conditions are reported if Full Replacing (FR) of Conventional Generating Units (CGUs) is considered. However, fewer instability conditions are obtained if Partial Replacing (PR) is considered in lieu of FR since CGU keep excitation control systems (AVR, exciter) and turbine governor controls activated.