Title :
Voltage regulation of LV feeders with high penetration of PV distributed generation using electronic tap changing transformers
Author :
Kabiri, Roozbeh ; Holmes, D.G. ; McGrath, Brendan P.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., RMIT Univ., Melbourne, VIC, Australia
fDate :
Sept. 28 2014-Oct. 1 2014
Abstract :
As penetration levels of PV Distributed Generation (DG) continue to increase into Low Voltage distribution feeders, electrical utility companies are finding that traditional strategies for managing the voltage profile along these feeders are becoming less effective because of the bidirectional variations in real power flow that are caused by these PV systems. Various strategies have been proposed to resolve this issue, commonly by enhancing the inverter systems of the PV sources to inject reactive power to help flatten the feeder voltage profile. However, such approaches usually require coordinated communication between the PV inverters, and are technically complex to implement. This paper proposes an alternative approach, by incorporating an electronic tap changer into the distribution transformer that supplies the LV feeder so that the LV supply voltage magnitude can step change on a 50Hz cycle by cycle basis. A simple algorithm then varies the transformer tap position as the power flow through the transformer changes, to keep the voltages along the feeder well within regulatory limits irrespective of the magnitude and direction of power flow. The strategy has been confirmed by detailed simulation investigations on feeders with a variety of characteristics, under a wide range of load and PV power injection conditions.
Keywords :
distributed power generation; invertors; load flow control; photovoltaic power systems; power transformers; voltage control; bidirectional variations; distribution transformer; electrical utility companies; electronic tap changer; electronic tap changing transformers; frequency 50 Hz; inverter systems; low voltage distribution feeders; photovolaic power injection; photovoltaic distributed generation; photovoltaic inverters; power flow; reactive power; transformer tap position; voltage profile; voltage regulation; Australia; Educational institutions; Fluctuations; Impedance; Load flow; Reactive power; Voltage control; distributed generation; electronic tap changer; voltage regulation;
Conference_Titel :
Power Engineering Conference (AUPEC), 2014 Australasian Universities
Conference_Location :
Perth, WA
DOI :
10.1109/AUPEC.2014.6966635