DocumentCode
2693188
Title
Transient stability and control of renewable generators based on Hamiltonian Surface Shaping and Power Flow Control: Part I-theory
Author
Robinett, Rush D., III ; Wilson, David G.
Author_Institution
Energy, Resources & Syst. Anal. Center, Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fYear
2010
fDate
8-10 Sept. 2010
Firstpage
2196
Lastpage
2202
Abstract
The swing equations for renewable generators connected to the grid are developed and a wind turbine is used as an example. The swing equations for the renewable generators are formulated as a natural Hamiltonian system with externally applied non-conservative forces. A two-step process referred to as Hamiltonian Surface Shaping and Power Flow Control (HSSPFC) is used to analyze and design feedback controllers for the renewable generators system. This formulation extends previous results on the analytical verification of the Potential Energy Boundary Surface (PEBS) method to nonlinear control analysis and design and justifies the decomposition of the system into conservative and non-conservative systems to enable a two-step, serial analysis and design procedure. The first step is to analyze the system as a conservative natural Hamiltonian system with no externally applied non-conservative forces. The Hamiltonian surface of the swing equations is related to the Equal-Area Criterion and the PEBS method to formulate the nonlinear transient stability problem. This formulation demonstrates the effectiveness of proportional feedback control to expand the stability region. The second step is to analyze the system as natural Hamiltonian system with externally applied non-conservative forces. The time derivative of the Hamiltonian produces the work/rate (power flow) equations which is used to ensure balanced power flows from the renewable generators to the loads. The Second Law of Thermodynamics is applied to the power flow equations to determine the stability boundaries (limit cycles) of the renewable generators system and enable design of feedback controllers that meet stability requirements while maximizing the power generation and flow to the load. Necessary and sufficient conditions for stability of renewable generators systems are determined based on the concepts of Hamiltonian systems, power flow, exergy (the maximum work that can be extracted from an energy flow) rate- - , and entropy rate.
Keywords
control system synthesis; entropy; exergy; feedback; nonlinear control systems; power control; power grids; proportional control; renewable energy sources; stability; wind turbines; Hamiltonian surface shaping; PEBS method; Second Law of Thermodynamics; equal-area criterion; exergy; feedback controller design; nonlinear control analysis; nonlinear control design; nonlinear transient stability problem; potential energy boundary surface; power flow control; proportional feedback control; renewable generators; wind turbine; Asymptotic stability; Equations; Generators; Power system stability; Stability criteria; Thermal stability;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Control Applications (CCA), 2010 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Yokohama
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5362-7
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-5363-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCA.2010.5611140
Filename
5611140
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