SYSYMar 30

A System-View Optimal Additional Active Power Control of Wind Turbines for Grid Frequency Support

arXiv:2603.2844095.434 citationsh-index: 18
AI Analysis

This work addresses grid frequency stability challenges for renewable energy integration, offering a novel control method that is incremental over existing virtual inertia approaches.

The paper tackles the problem of improving transient frequency stability in low-inertia power systems by proposing an optimal additional active power control for wind turbines, which significantly enhances the system frequency nadir post-power deficits, as verified through simulations in standard power systems.

Additional active power control (AAPC) of wind turbines (WTs) is essential to improve the transient frequency stability of low-inertia power systems. Most of the existing research has focused on imitating the frequency response of the synchronous generator (SG), known as virtual inertia control (VIC), but are such control laws optimal for the power systems? Inspired by this question, this paper proposes an optimal AAPC of WTs to maximize the frequency nadir post a major power deficit. By decoupling the WT response and the frequency dynamics, the optimal frequency trajectory is solved based on the trajectory model, and its universality is strictly proven. Then the optimal AAPC of WTs is constructed reversely based on the average system frequency (ASF) model with the optimal frequency trajectory as the desired control results. The proposed method can significantly improve the system frequency nadir. Meanwhile, the event insensitivity makes it can be deployed based on the on-line rolling update under a hypothetic disturbance, avoiding the heavy post-event computational burden. Finally, simulation results in a two-machine power system and the IEEE 39 bus power system verify the effectiveness of the optimal AAPC of WTs.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes