SYSYFeb 20, 2019

Enhanced Automatic Generation Control (E-AGC) for Electric Power Systems with Large Intermittent Renewable Energy Sources

arXiv:1902.076446 citationsh-index: 50
AI Analysis

For power system operators, this work addresses frequency regulation challenges caused by intermittent renewables, but the simulation on a small 5-bus system limits immediate practical impact.

This paper develops a new dynamical model for power systems with high renewable penetration that captures fast nonlinear disturbances, and proposes an Enhanced Automatic Generation Control (E-AGC) to cancel interarea oscillations. Simulations on a 5-bus system demonstrate the approach.

This paper is motivated by the need to enhance today's Automatic Generation Control (AGC) for ensuring high quality frequency response in the changing electric power systems. Renewable energy sources, if not controlled carefully, create persistent fast and often large oscillations in their electric power outputs. A sufficiently detailed dynamical model of the interconnected system which captures the effects of fast nonlinear disturbances created by the renewable energy resources is derived for the first time. Consequently, the real power flow interarea oscillations and the resulting frequency deviations are modeled. The modeling is multi-layered, and the dynamics of each layer (component level (generator); control area (control balancing authority), and the interconnected system) is expressed in terms of internal states and the interaction variables (IntV) between the layers and within the layers. E-AGC is then derived using this model to show how these interarea oscillations can be canceled. Simulation studies are carried out on a 5-bus system.

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