Jun-ichi Imura

SY
7papers
145citations
Novelty43%
AI Score23

7 Papers

SYMar 12, 2018
Retrofit Control: Localization of Controller Design and Implementation

Takayuki Ishizaki, Tomonori Sadamoto, Jun-ichi Imura et al.

In this paper, we propose a retrofit control method for stable network systems. The proposed approach is a control method that, rather than an entire system model, requires a model of the subsystem of interest for controller design. To design the retrofit controller, we use a novel approach based on hierarchical state-space expansion that generates a higher-dimensional cascade realization of a given network system. The upstream dynamics of the cascade realization corresponds to an isolated model of the subsystem of interest, which is stabilized by a local controller. The downstream dynamics can be seen as a dynamical model representing the propagation of interference signals among subsystems, the stability of which is equivalent to that of the original system. This cascade structure enables a systematic analysis of both the stability and control performance of the resultant closed-loop system. The resultant retrofit controller is formed as a cascade interconnection of the local controller and an output rectifier that rectifies an output signal of the subsystem of interest so as to conform to an output signal of the isolated subsystem model while acquiring complementary signals neglected in the local controller design, such as interconnection signals from neighboring subsystems. Finally, the efficiency of the retrofit control method is demonstrated through numerical examples of power systems control and vehicle platoon control.

SYMar 1, 2018
Synchronization and Aggregation of Nonlinear Power Systems with Consideration of Bus Network Structures

Petar Mlinarić, Takayuki Ishizaki, Aranya Chakrabortty et al.

We study nonlinear power systems consisting of generators, generator buses, and non-generator buses. First, looking at a generator and its bus' variables jointly, we introduce a synchronization concept for a pair of such joint generators and buses. We show that this concept is related to graph symmetry. Next, we extend, in two ways, the synchronization from a pair to a partition of all generators in the networks and show that they are related to either graph symmetry or equitable partitions. Finally, we show how an exact reduced model can be obtained by aggregating the generators and associated buses in the network when the original system is synchronized with respect to a partition, provided that the initial condition respects the partition. Additionally, the aggregation-based reduced model is again a power system.

SYFeb 22, 2017
A Retrofitting-based Supplementary Controller Design for Enhancing Damping Performance of Wind Power Systems

Tomonori Sadamoto, Aranya Chakrabortty, Takayuki Ishizaki et al.

In this paper we address the growing concerns of wind power integration from the perspective of power system dynamics and stability. We propose a new retrofit control technique where an additional controller is designed at the doubly-fed induction generator site inside the wind power plant. This controller cancels the adverse impacts of the power flow from the wind side to the grid side on the dynamics of the overall power system. The main advantage of this controller is that it can be implemented by feeding back only the wind states and wind bus voltage without depending on any of the other synchronous machines in the rest of the system. Through simulations of a 4-machine Kundur power system model we show that the retrofit can efficiently enhance the damping performance of the system variable despite very high values of wind penetration.

SYOct 2, 2018
Retrofit Control with Approximate Environment Modeling

Takayuki Ishizaki, Takahiro Kawaguchi, Hampei Sasahara et al.

In this paper, we develop a retrofit control method with approximate environment modeling. Retrofit control is a modular control approach for a general stable network system whose subsystems are supposed to be managed by their corresponding subsystem operators. From the standpoint of a single subsystem operator who performs the design of a retrofit controller, the subsystems managed by all other operators can be regarded as an environment, the complete system model of which is assumed not to be available. The proposed retrofit control with approximate environment modeling has an advantage that the stability of the resultant control system is robustly assured regardless of not only the stability of approximate environment models, but also the magnitude of modeling errors, provided that the network system before implementing retrofit control is originally stable. This robustness property is practically significant to incorporate existing identification methods of unknown environments, because the accuracy of identified models may neither be reliable nor assurable in reality. Furthermore, we conduct a control performance analysis to show that the resultant performance can be regulated by adjusting the accuracy of approximate environment modeling. The efficiency of the proposed retrofit control is shown by numerical experiments on a network of second-order oscillators.

SYSep 13, 2018
Dynamic Modeling, Stability, and Control of Power Systems with Distributed Energy Resources

Tomonori Sadamoto, Aranya Chakrabortty, Takayuki Ishizaki et al.

This article presents a suite of new control designs for next-generation electric smart grids. The future grid will consist of thousands of non-conventional renewable generation sources such as wind, solar, and energy storage. These new components are collectively referred to as distributed energy resources (DER). The article presents a comprehensive list of dynamic models for DERs, and shows their coupling with the conventional generators and loads. It then presents several innovative control designs that can be used for facilitating large-scale DER integration. Ideas from decentralized retrofit control and distributed sparsity-promoting optimal control are used for developing these designs, followed by illustrations on an IEEE power system test model.

SYJun 8, 2017
Transient Response Improvement for Interconnected Linear Systems: Low-Dimensional Controller Retrofit Approach

Takayuki Ishizaki, Masakazu Koike, Jun-ichi Imura

In this paper, we propose a method of designing low-dimensional retrofit controllers for interconnected linear systems. In the proposed method, by retrofitting an additional low-dimensional controller to a preexisting control system, we aim at improving transient responses caused by spatially local state deflections, which can be regarded as a local fault occurring at a specific subsystem. It is found that a type of state-space expansion, called hierarchical state-space expansion, is the key to systematically designing a low-dimensional retrofit controller, whose action is specialized to controlling the corresponding subsystem. Furthermore, the state-space expansion enables theoretical clarification of the fact that the performance index of the transient response control is improved by appropriately tuning the retrofit controller. The efficiency of the proposed method is shown through a motivating example of power system control where we clarify the trade-off relation between the dimension of a retrofit controller and its control performance.

SYOct 28, 2015
Weak Resilience of Networked Control Systems

Tomonori Sadamoto, Henrik Sandberg, Bart Besselink et al.

In this paper, we propose a method to establish a networked control system that maintains its stability in the presence of certain undesirable incidents on local controllers. We call such networked control systems weakly resilient. We first derive a necessary and sufficient condition for the weak resilience of networked systems. Networked systems do not generally satisfy this condition. Therefore, we provide a method for designing a compensator which ensures the weak resilience of the compensated system. Finally, we illustrate the efficiency of the proposed method by a power system example based on the IEEE 14-bus test system.