Author :
Bidram, Ali ; Lewis, Frank L. ; Davoudi, Ali
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX, USA
Abstract :
Existing electric power distribution networks are operating near full capacity and facing rapid changes to address environmental concerns and improve their reliability and sustainability. These concerns are satisfied through the effective integration and coordination of distributed generators (DGs), which facilitate the exploitation of renewable energy resources, including wind power, photovoltaics, and fuel cells [1]. Although DGs can be of rotating machinery type, more recently, DGs have been designed to support renewable energy resources by electronic interfacing through voltage source inverters (VSI). Each DG corresponds to one energy source, and its control inputs are given to the interface VSI [1]-[5]. The successful coordination of DGs can be realized through microgrids, which are small-scale power systems consisting of local generation, local loads, and energy storage systems. Microgrids are autonomous subsystems with dedicated control systems that provide guaranteed power quality for local loads such as hospitals, economic centers, apartments, and universities. The microgrid concept, with its local control and power quality support, allows for the scalable integration of local power resources and loads into the existing power grid and enables a high penetration of distributed generation [5]-[10].
Keywords :
distributed power generation; fuel cells; machinery; photovoltaic power systems; power distribution control; power generation control; power supply quality; wind power; VSI; autonomous subsystems; distributed control systems; distributed generators; electric power distribution networks; energy storage systems; fuel cells; local generation; local loads; microgrids; multiagent cooperative control; photovoltaics; power quality; renewable energy resources; rotating machinery; small scale power networks; voltage source inverters; wind power; Communication networks; Cooperative systems; Decentralized control; Distributed power generation; Frequency control; Microgrids; Multi-agent systems; Power distribution planning; Voltage control;