Title :
Impact of green power inverter-based distributed generation on distribution systems
Author_Institution :
Beckwith Electr. Co., Largo, FL, USA
fDate :
March 31 2014-April 3 2014
Abstract :
A significant amount of green power is being installed at the distribution level through the installation of green power generation facilities in many parts of the United States and Canada. Green sources such as solar and wind are some of the green generation being interconnected at the distribution level. These non-conventional generators use inverter-based technologies and operate in parallel with utility distribution feeders. The fault behavior of an inverter-interfaced solar or wind distributed generator (DG) is determined by its control, which is significantly different from conventional synchronous and induction generators. In addition, utilities have expressed a concern that distributed generators interfaced to the grid via inverters could cause a transient overvoltage during a single phase to ground fault, after the substation breaker opens. The concern is that this overvoltage will damage utility equipment such as lightning arresters or saturate line-to-neutral rated utility feeder transformers resulting in transformer failure. This paper examines both the fault current and overvoltage issue and compares inverter based distributed generations (DGs) with conventional synchronous and induction DGs.
Keywords :
arresters; asynchronous generators; distributed power generation; earthing; fault currents; lightning protection; overvoltage protection; power apparatus; power distribution control; power distribution faults; power generation control; power generation faults; power system interconnection; power transformers; solar power stations; substation protection; synchronous generators; wind power plants; Canada; DG; United States; distributed generation; distribution system; fault current; green power generation facility; green power inverter; induction generator; lightning arrester; power system control; power system fault; power system interconnection; saturate line-to-neutral rated utility feeder transformer; single phase to ground fault; solar source; substation breaker; synchronous generator; transient overvoltage; utility distribution feeder; utility equipment damage; wind source; Current control; Fault currents; Generators; Green products; Inverters; Transient analysis; Voltage control;
Conference_Titel :
Protective Relay Engineers, 2014 67th Annual Conference for
Conference_Location :
College Station, TX
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4740-9
DOI :
10.1109/CPRE.2014.6799006