Voltage and Frequency Control of Inverters Connected in Parallel Forming A Micro-Grid
Voltage and Frequency Control of Inverters Connected in Parallel Forming A Micro-Grid
I. INTRODUCTION
II.
us
jX
I&s S&s
ur 0
S&r = Pr + jQr
S&s = Ps + jQs
X : line inductance
: phase angle
us : voltage at sending side
ur : voltage at receiving side
I&s
jX
ur
: power angle
I& : current at sending side
S&s : apparent power at sending side
S&r : apparent power at receiving side
978-1-4244-5939-1/10/$26.002010 IEEE
u u e j
S&s = Ps + jQs =u&s I&* =u&s s r
jX
uu
Ps = s r sin *
X
(1)
( 2)
Qs =
us (us ur cos )
X
(3)
u s ur
X
u (u u )
Qs = s s r
X
( 4)
Ps =
( 5)
f f 0 = k p ( P P0 )
u u0 = kq (Q Q0 )
( 6)
(7)
P0 and Q0 are the momentary set points for active power and
reactive power of the inverter, k p and kq are the frequency
coefficient and voltage coefficient respectively.
B. Voltage and Frequency Control[11]
Equations (6) and (7) are the basis of voltage and
frequency control of inverters connected in parallel forming a
micro-grid.
The power share of two inverters based on droop control is
described in figure 2. Assuming frequency droop coefficients
of the two inverters as k p1 and k p 2 , the output active power of
P1 k p 2
=
P2 k p1
(10)
P1 k p1 =P2 k p 2 = ... = Pn k pn
(11)
(12)
Ps ur
=
us X
Q u u
I re = s = s r
us
X
Ia =
(13)
(14)
1
f1 f 0
k p1
(8)
1
f1 f 0
k p2
(9)
P1 = P11 P10 =
P2 = P21 P20 =
f f 0 = ka ( I a I a 0 )
u u0 = kre ( I re I re 0 )
(15)
(16)
as example. Assuming
can be written:
and voltage
+
-
u d
u q
ia
ib
ic
uabCf
ubcCf
ucaCf
ud
uq
uabC
ubcC
ucaC
Z
uabC C
ubcC
ucaC
f f0 =
M=
ka ,
D= 1
1
(id id 0 )
Ms + D
ka , equation (18)
(20)
I a
id 0
1
Ms + D
f = f f 0
id
Fig. 4. Control diagram of first-order inertia unit
idf
iqf
ud
id
iq
iaf
ibf
icf
ikf
iq
1
cs +1
id f
ia
ib
ic
id
iqf
iaf
id
i = T3s 2 r ibf
q
icf
(17)
ka
(i i )
cs +1 d d0
k
u u0 = re (iq iq 0 )
cs +1
f f0 =
(18)
(19)
= 1/
c , otherwise
(LF) in less than turn-point frequency c
attenuate at -20dB more than turn-point frequency.
Equation (20) describes the first-order inertia unit in
continuous domain. But in digital control system, it must be
discredited. Through bilinear transform of equation (20), the
expression can beget in the z domain:
f ( z) f0 =
z +1
(id ( z ) id 0 ) (21)
(2 Mf s + D) z + ( D 2 Mf s )
kre =
(23)
I re max
When the reactive current I re is greater than zero, the gridforming inverter will work at capacitive region, otherwise
active current I re is less than zero, and it will work at
inductive region. But no matter what kind of modes the gridforming inverters work, the reactive power share mechanism
of every grid-forming inverter is following as equation (12).
IV. SIMULATION AND EXPERIMENT RESULTS
A. System Description
In order to verify the feasibility of the control scheme
proposed above, a system formed by two inverters with the
same parameters is designed. The system parameters
description is shown in table1.
TABLE 1. SYSTEM PARAMETERS DESCRIPTION
Parameters Symbol
Value
Physical Meanings
Sinv1=Sinv2
10kVA
Apparent power
kp1=kp2
0.033(Hz/A)*
kq1=kq2
0.735(V/A)*
f01= f02
50(Hz)
Nominal frequency
u01= u02
220V
Nominal voltage
Ia01= Ia02
Ire01= Ire02
Lf1= Lf2
1.5mH
Filter inductance
Cf1= Cf2
22uF
Filter capacitance
r/X
0.1
f ( Hz )
u (V )
f max
umax
f0
Rectifier
Region
I a min
f
f
f min
u0
Inverter
Region
I a ( A)
I a max
u
u
umin
Inductive
Region
I re min
Capacitive
Region
I re ( A)
I re max
ka =
I a max
(22)
When the active current I a is greater than zero, the gridforming inverter will work at inverter mode, otherwise active
current I a is less than zero, and it will work at rectifier mode.
But no matter what kind of modes the grid-forming inverters
work, the active power share mechanism of every gridforming inverter is following as equation (11).
Similarly the droop coefficient of reactive current versus
voltage is defined as:
iq1 = iq 2 =15.6A.
=0.8s
The frequency and the voltage of the grid are shown in figure
7 and 8 respectively. Before t=5s, the frequency and the
voltage of the grid is 49.947Hz and 216V, at t=5s,the loads
demand increasing, the frequency and the voltage of the grid
is decrease to 49.897Hz and 212V.
C. Experiment Results
Two prototypes with the capacity of 10kVA are established
in laboratory, which have the same parameters as those of the
simulation model. Take c =0.4s, sampling frequency
In figure 11, channel 1 is output current waveform of gridforming inverter 1, channel 2 is that of grid-forming inverter 2,
and channel 3 is that of loads. From the results, the current
value of the loads is 7.3A, and that of grid-forming inverter1
and grid-forming inverter2 is 3.7A and 3.6A respectively.
Changing the loads demand from R=30 to R=18, and
from R=18 to R=30, the output current waveforms of the
grid-forming inverters and the loads is shown in figure 12 and
figure 13.
=0.8s
Fig. 12. The output current with increasing loads
VII. BIOGRAPHIES
V. CONCLUSIONS
After analysis and experimental verification, conclusions
were obtained.
(1) Inverters do not have the same droop characteristics as
the synchronous generators, and has rapid voltage and
frequency response with the loads change. After introducing
the first-order inertia, voltage and frequency regulation
characteristics of parallel inverters forming a micro-grid are
similar to those of synchronous generators.
(2) Appropriate droop coefficients can guarantee every
inverter to share load respectively and maintain the voltage
and frequency of micro-grid stability.
(3) The more first-order inertia time constant can improve
the voltage and frequency of micro-grid stability, but decrease
the dynamic response speed. So it is very important to set a
right first-order inertia time constant for micro-grid stability.
VI. REFERENCES
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]