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Models and analysis of fuel switching generation impacts on power system resilience

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Knueven, Ben; Staid, Andrea S.; Watson, Jean-Paul W.

This paper presents model formulations for generators that have the ability to use multiple fuels and to switch between them if necessary. These models are used to generate different scenarios of fuel switching penetration from a test power system. With these scenarios, for a severe disruption in the fuel supply to multiple generators, the paper analyzes the effect that fuel switching has on the resilience of the power system. Load not served is used as the proxy metric to evaluate power system resilience. The paper shows that the presence of generators with fuel switching capabilities considerably reduces the amount and duration of the load shed by the system facing the fuel disruption.

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Opportunities and Trends for Energy Storage plus Solar in CAISO: 2014-2018

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Byrne, Raymond H.; Nguyen, Tu A.; Headley, Alexander H.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Concepcion, Ricky J.; Trevizan, Rodrigo D.

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Inertia estimation in power systems using energy storage and system identification techniques

2020 International Symposium on Power Electronics, Electrical Drives, Automation and Motion, SPEEDAM 2020

Tamrakar, Ujjwol; Guruwacharya, Nischal; Bhujel, Niranjan; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Hansen, Timothy M.; Tonkoski, Reinaldo

Fast-frequency control strategies have been proposed in the literature to maintain inertial response of electric generation and help with the frequency regulation of the system. However, it is challenging to deploy such strategies when the inertia constant of the system is unknown and time-varying. In this paper, we present a data-driven system identification approach for an energy storage system (ESS) operator to identify the inertial response of the system (and consequently the inertia constant). The method is first tested and validated with a simulated genset model using small changes in the system load as the excitation signal and measuring the corresponding change in frequency. The validated method is then used to experimentally identify the inertia constant of a genset. The inertia constant of the simulated genset model was estimated with an error of less than 5% which provides a reasonable estimate for the ESS operator to properly tune the parameters of a fast-frequency controller.

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Damping of Inter-Area Oscillations via Modulation of Aggregated Loads

IEEE Transactions on Power Systems

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Byrne, Raymond H.; Lian, Jianming

Low frequency electromechanical oscillations can pose a threat to the stability of power systems if not properly addressed. This paper proposes a novel methodology to damp these inter-area oscillations using loads, the demand side of the system. In the proposed methodology, loads are assigned to an aggregated cluster whose demand is modulated for oscillation damping. The load cluster control action is obtained from an optimal output feedback control (OOFC) strategy. The paper presents an extension to the regular OOFC formulation by imposing a constraint on the sum of the rows in the optimal gain matrix. This constraint is useful when the feedback signals are generator speeds. In this case, the sum of the rows of the optimal gain matrix is the droop gain of each load actuator. Time-domain simulations of a large-scale power system are used to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed control algorithm. Two different cases are considered: a power imbalance and a line fault. The simulation results show that the proposed controllers successfully damp inter-area oscillations under different operating conditions and with different clustering for the events considered. In addition, the simulations illustrate the benefit of the proposed extension to the OOFC that enable load to provide a combination of droop control and small signal stability augmentation.

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A Test Bed for Evaluating Frequency Estimation Algorithms in Synthetic Inertia Control: User Manual

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Balliet, W.H.; Wold, Joshua

As penetration of converter interfaced generators (CIGs) increases, the need for CIG frequency control participation increases. Traditionally, research in this area has been performed using positive sequence simulation software, which provides voltage magnitude and phase measurements, but not point-on-wave (POW) measurements. This means that the effect of frequency estimation algorithms cannot be accurately modeled, especially when the voltage waveform is distorted by faults or load connection events. This report serves as a user manual for an electromagnetic transient simulation testbed, which allows for accurate modeling of frequency estimation and control techniques.

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Forced oscillations in the western interconnection with the pacific dc intertie wide area damping controller

2020 IEEE Power and Energy Society Innovative Smart Grid Technologies Conference, ISGT 2020

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Pierre, Brian J.; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Neely, Jason C.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.

Forced oscillations in power systems are of particular interest when they interact and reinforce inter-area oscillations. This paper determines how a previously proposed inter-area damping controller mitigates forced oscillations. The damping controller modulates active power on the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) based on phasor measurement units (PMU) frequency measurements. The primary goal of the controller is to improve the small signal stability of the north south B mode in the North American Western Interconnection (WI). The paper presents small signal stability analysis in a reduced order system, time-domain simulations of a detailed representation of the WI and actual system test results to demonstrate that the PDCI damping controller provides effective damping to forced oscillations in the frequency range below 1 Hz.

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A frequency-shaped controller for damping inter-area oscillations in power systems

IFAC-PapersOnLine

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Schoenwald, David A.; Pierre, Brian J.; Byrne, Raymond H.

This paper discusses how to design an inter-area oscillations damping controller using a frequency-shaped optimal output feedback control approach. This control approach was chosen because inter-area oscillations occur at a particular frequency range, from 0.2 to 1 Hz, which is the interval the control action must be prioritized. This paper shows that using only the filter for the system states can sufficiently damp the system modes. In addition, the paper shows that the filter for the input can be adjusted to provide primary frequency regulation to the system with no effect to the desired damping control action. Time domain simulations of a power system with a set of controllable power injection devices are presented to show the effectiveness of the designed controller.

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Results 26–50 of 125
Results 26–50 of 125