Frequency Control in Microgrids: An Adaptive Fuzzy-Neural-Network Virtual Synchronous Generator
This addresses frequency control issues in microgrids for power systems engineers, offering a robust solution but is incremental as it builds on existing virtual synchronous generator methods.
The paper tackles the problem of frequency instability in microgrids due to reduced inertia from renewable energy sources by proposing an adaptive fuzzy-neural-network virtual synchronous generator, which reduces frequency deviation to less than 0.03 Hz and shortens recovery time compared to traditional methods.
The reliance on distributed renewable energy has increased recently. As a result, power electronic-based distributed generators replaced synchronous generators which led to a change in the dynamic characteristics of the microgrid. Most critically, they reduced system inertia and damping. Virtual synchronous generators emulated in power electronics, which mimic the dynamic behaviour of synchronous generators, are meant to fix this problem. However, fixed virtual synchronous generator parameters cannot guarantee a frequency regulation within the acceptable tolerance range. Conversely, a dynamic adjustment of these virtual parameters promises robust solution with stable frequency. This paper proposes a method to adapt the inertia, damping, and droop parameters dynamically through a fuzzy neural network controller. This controller trains itself online to choose appropriate values for these virtual parameters. The proposed method can be applied to a typical AC microgrid by considering the penetration and impact of renewable energy sources. We study the system in a MATLAB/Simulink model and validate it experimentally in real time using hardware-in-the-loop based on an embedded ARM system (SAM3X8E, Cortex-M3). Compared to traditional and fuzzy logic controller methods, the results demonstrate that the proposed method significantly reduces the frequency deviation to less than 0.03 Hz and shortens the stabilizing/recovery time.