DocumentCode
40263
Title
Distribution Voltage Control for DC Microgrids Using Fuzzy Control and Gain-Scheduling Technique
Author
Kakigano, Hiroaki ; Miura, Yushi ; Ise, Toshifumi
Author_Institution
Div. of Electr., Electron., & Inf. Eng., Osaka Univ., Suita, Japan
Volume
28
Issue
5
fYear
2013
fDate
May-13
Firstpage
2246
Lastpage
2258
Abstract
Installation of many distributed generations (DGs) could be detrimental to the power quality of utility grids. Microgrids facilitate effortless installation of DGs in conventional power systems. In recent years, dc microgrids have gained popularity because dc output sources such as photovoltaic systems, fuel cells, and batteries can be interconnected without ac/dc conversion, which contributes to total system efficiency. Moreover, high-quality power can be supplied continuously when voltage sags or blackouts occur in utility grids. We had already proposed a “low-voltage bipolar-type dc microgrid” and described its configuration, operation, and control scheme, through experiments. In the experiments, we used one energy storage unit with a dc/dc converter to maintain the dc-bus voltage under intentional islanding operation. However, dc microgrids should have two or more energy storage units for system redundancy. Therefore, we modified the system by adding another energy storage unit to our experimental system. Several kinds of droop controls have been proposed for parallel operations, some of which were applied for ac or dc microgrids. If a gain-scheduling control scheme is adopted to share the storage unit outputs, the storage energy would become unbalanced. This paper therefore presents a new voltage control that combines fuzzy control with gain-scheduling techniques to accomplish both power sharing and energy management. The experimental results show that the dc distribution voltages were within 340 V ± 5%, and the ratios of the stored energy were approximately equal, which implies that dc voltage regulation and stored energy balancing control can be realized simultaneously.
Keywords
DC-DC power convertors; distributed power generation; energy management systems; fuzzy control; power generation control; power generation scheduling; power supply quality; voltage control; DC-DC converter; DC-bus voltage; DG; batteries; blackouts; distribution voltage control; energy balancing control storage; energy management; energy storage unit; fuel cells; fuzzy control; gain-scheduling technique; intentional islanding operation; low-voltage bipolar-type DC microgrid; photovoltaic systems; power quality; power sharing; utility grids; voltage sags; Batteries; DC-DC power converters; Fuzzy control; Power generation; Voltage control; DC power systems; fuzzy control; gain-scheduling control; microgrids;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8993
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPEL.2012.2217353
Filename
6297477
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