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The primary objective of this doctoral thesis is the design and development of hierarchical control schemes for the overall operation and control of Islanded mGs (ImGs) with flexible structuresâor, with no reference topologies.
The control methodologies devised as part of this work attend to some of the key challenges in the control of AC and DC ImGs, while doing away the limitations of several existing schemes. This thesis comprises three parts. The first part delineates a passivity-based approach to the design of scalable primary controllers ensuring voltage stability in DC ImGs, and voltage and frequency stability in AC ImGs. Unlike most primary controllers in the literature, our passivating regulators guarantee offset-free tracking of reference signals, while factoring in power line dynamics and nonlinear loads. Furthermore, the proposed primary local controllersâcompletely decentralized from the standpoint of both design and structureâcan always be synthesized. This brings about a true Plug-and-Play (PnP) functionality, that is, DGUs can plug-in to, as well as plug-out of, the ImG network without having any bearing on its stability.
The second part focuses on DC ImGs and, with a view to their safe, reliable, and efficient operation, details higher-level supervisory control structures capable of seamlessly interfacing with the primary controllers developed before. Our supervisory controllers take two forms: (i) consensus-based distributed controllers; and (ii) flexible EnergyManagement System (EMS), along with an intermediary layer drawing on power-flow equations. In the former case, we consider the objective of voltage balancing and proportional current sharing and, without assuming any timescale separation, prove that the desired coordinated behaviors are achieved in a stable fashion. Compatible with that of the primary regulators, the design of the secondary regulators is fully decentralized, facilitating PnP operations. The supervisory control architecture in the latter case aims at properly defining mG internal voltages, efficiently coordinating DGU operations, and minimizing mG operation costs, while taking into consideration the non-deterministic absorption/production of loads and renewables.
Any meaningful planning and optimization task pertaining to temporally varying mGs and distribution networks alike hinges on network identificationâthe knowledge of the admittance matrix capturing topological information and line parameters of an electric network.Keeping this is view, in the third part we set out a data-driven, online network identification procedure using phasor measurements of voltages and currents. We also take advantage of tools from theory of Optimal Experiment Design (OED) to accelerate the convergence of the proposed identification algorithm. All theoretical results and design approaches presented in the thesis are corroborated by means of extensive numerical simulations capturing realistic mG benchmarks.
Alireza Karimi, Vaibhav Gupta, Elias Sebastian Klauser
Auke Ijspeert, Mohamed Bouri, Ali Reza Manzoori, Romain Pierre François Baud