Implementation Strategy of Test Facility Based on Auto-Transformer for LVRT/HVRT Evaluation of Large-Scale Wind Turbine
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- -
- A 30 kW-scale artificial LVRT/HVRT test facility implemented by impedance determination algorithm and operation strategy is confirmed that can be stably applied for the LVRT/HVRT field test of a large-scale wind turbine;
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- From systematical simulation analysis and test by the artificial test simulator, it shows that LVRT/HVRT facility-based autotransformer can efficiently perform as a test facility for large-scale wind turbines and has the advantage of implementing voltages in a wide range;
- -
- Through the proposed impedance determination algorithm, it is confirmed that a test facility can be stably developed for a 12 MW-scale LVRT/HVRT facility.
2. Characteristics of the LVRT/HVRT Test Facility for Wind Turbines
2.1. Characteristics of the LVRT/HVRT Test Facility
2.2. Modeling of LVRT and HVRT Test Facility
3. The Two-Step Layer Impedance Determination Algorithm of the LVRT/HVRT Test Facility
3.1. Impedance Determination Based on an Impedance Map
3.2. Successive Approximation Method Using a Two-Step Layer
4. Differential Operation Procedure of the LVRT/HVRT Test Facility-Based Autotransformer
4.1. Test Facility Operation Strategy in LVRT State
- (1)
- STEP 1: Normal operation
- -
- Standby: power is not applied to the LVRT test facility (the normal state where the voltage sag does not occur due to switches (bypass circuit breaker, selection circuit breaker and control circuit breaker) is the open situation);
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- Grid connection: the state in which only the grid and the wind turbine are directly connected without the test facility according to the closed situation of main-MC1 (the main circuit breaker) and bypass-MC1 (the bypass circuit breaker).
- (2)
- STEP 2: Tap operation
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- WT-TR connection: the connection state between the shunt tap of the test facility and the wind turbine according to the closed situation of control-MC2 (selection circuit breaker of WT side).
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- Parallel operation: the test facility is connected in parallel with the grid according to the closed situation of control-MC1 (the selection circuit breaker of the grid), which is located between the input of series winding in the test facility and grid.
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- Series operation: the test facility is connected in series between the grid and WT by bypass-MC1 is open while control-MC2 remains closed (to be kept as a rated voltage).
- (3)
- STEP 3: LVRT operation
4.2. Test Facility Operation Strategy in HVRT State
- (1)
- STEP 1: Normal operation
- (2)
- STEP 2: Tap operation
- -
- WT-TR connection: the connection state between the shunt taps of the test facility and the wind turbine according to the closed situation of control-MC1 (selection circuit breaker of the WT side).
- -
- Parallel operation: the test facility is connected in parallel with the grid according to the closed situation of control-MC2 (selection circuit breaker of the grid), which is located between the input of the series winding in the test facility and grid.
- -
- Series operation: the test facility is connected in series between the grid and WT by bypass-MC1 is open while control-MC1 remains closed situation (to be kept as rated voltage.
- (3)
- STEP 3: HVRT operation
5. Implementation of a 30 kW-Scale Hardware-in-Loop Test System for LVRT/HVRT Performance Evaluation of WT
5.1. Evaluation System for a 30 kW-Scale Hardware-in-Loop Test System
5.2. Wind Turbine Hardware-in-Loop System
5.3. A 30 kW-Scale LVRT/HVRT Facility
5.4. Power Hardware-in-Loop System
6. Test Results and Analysis
6.1. Test Conditions
6.2. Impedance Determination for LVRT/HVRT Test
6.3. Impedance Determination for LVRT/HVRT Test
- (1)
- Performance verification
- (2)
- LVRT Test results
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- The 0 PU test
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- The 0.5 PU test
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- The 0.9 PU test
- (3)
- HVRT Test Results
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- The 1.1 PU test
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- The 1.3 PU test
7. Conclusions
- (1)
- For the operation of the LVRT/HVRT test facility, the wiring method of the autotransformer should be changed according to the overvoltage (HVRT) and undervoltage (LVRT) tests. Under these concepts, this paper proposes a differential operation strategy considering LVRT/HVRT wiring method to perform the stable test when the wind turbine generates power normally;
- (2)
- Using the proposed method, it was confirmed that the voltage of the auto-transformer was appropriately outputted from zero PU to 0.5 PU by the impedance determination method. However, the voltages from 0.5 PU to 1.3 PU were not outputted as accurate values due to a voltage drop caused by series impedance, even though the current determined by parallel impedance was kept within the allowable range (based on three times the short circuit ratio). Therefore, a parallel and series impedance at voltage level from 0.7 PU to 1.3 PU was adapted as re-calculated values by successive approximation method;
- (3)
- From the voltage characteristic results of all test procedures, it was confirmed that the error range of test voltage was satisfied within 5%, presented by the test guideline of IEC-61400-21-1. It was also found that the duration time of LVRT was exactly maintained as the value time presented by the test guideline of IEC-61400-21-1;
- (4)
- Therefore, it is clear that the proposed test strategy and implementation method of the test facility are useful tools for the dynamic performance verification of WT. Furthermore, based on the test results using a 30 kW-scale facility, we plan to apply the operation and tap decision method to a 12 MW facility in future work.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ref. | Contents | |
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Previous Methods | Proposed Method | |
[5,6,7,8,9,10] |
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[12,13] |
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[14,15,16,17] |
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Impedance (Existing) | Transformer (Proposed) |
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Voltage (x PU) | HVRT | Voltage (x PU) | LVRT | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.3 | 0.23 | 0.77 | 0.9 | 0.1 | 0.9 |
0.8 | 0.2 | 0.8 | |||
1.25 | 0.2 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.3 | 0.7 |
0.6 | 0.4 | 0.6 | |||
1.2 | 1.67 | 0.83 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
1.15 | 1.3 | 0.87 | 0.4 | 0.6 | 0.4 |
0.3 | 0.7 | 0.3 | |||
1.11 | 0.9 | 0.91 | 0.2 | 0.8 | 0.2 |
0.1 | 0.9 | 0.1 | |||
1.05 | 0.5 | 0.95 | 0 | 0.99 | 0.01 |
Category | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|
Rated Power | 5 | MW |
Rotor Orientation | Upwind | - |
Number of Blades | 3 | - |
Rotor Diameter | 126 | m |
Hub Height | 90 | m |
Cut-In, Rated Rotor Speed | 6.9, 12.1 | rpm |
Cut-In, Rated, Cut-Out Wind Speed | 3, 11.4, 25 | m/s |
Gearbox Ratio | 97:1 | - |
Generator Inertia | 534,116 | kg m2 |
Nacelle Mass | 240,000 | kg |
Tower Mass | 347,460 | kg |
Classification | Detailed Configuration |
---|---|
type of transformer | Air-core & iron-core reactors |
rated specification | Phase 60 Hz, |
capacity of transformer | 30 kVA |
Coil | AI 2NC 2.8 × 10.5 × 1H2W |
current density | 0.79 A/mm2 |
No. of turns | 6th floor = 72 T) |
cooling duct | 10 T × 5 = 50 m |
Hosting Capacity | S.Tr Ratio | S.Tr Impedance | Line Impedance | Capacity of WT | Rated Current of WT | Line Length |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 kW | 0.38 kV/ 0.38 kV | 6% | 4% | >10 kW | 20 A | 2 km |
Section | Line length | Impedance (%; 1 MVA) | Load | RES | ||
1 | 0.4 km | 0.8% | 2 kW | 0 | ||
2 | 0.8 km | 1.6% | 2 kW | 0 | ||
3 | 0.8 km | 1.6% | 1 kW | WT 10 kW (WT HILS) |
Test | Voltage Rate (Percent Unit) | Situation | Phase | WT Operating Power | Duration Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Test 1 | 0.0 PU | LVRT | 3 Phase | Full load | 150 ms |
Test 2 | 0.5 PU | LVRT | 3 Phase | Full load | 900 ms |
Test 3 | 0.9 PU | LVRT | 3 Phase | Full load | 1500 ms |
Test 4 | 1.1 PU | HVRT | 3 Phase | Full load | 600 ms |
Test 5 | 1.3 PU | HVRT | 3 Phase | Full load | 150 ms |
Z (Ω) Uint | Max. Z (Ω) in Case 3 Phase Fault | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.129 Ω (0.344 mH) | rate capacity (30 kVA) | 5.064 Ω (13.44 mH), 45.58 A | |||
capacity considering three-phase fault (90 kVA) | 1.296 Ω/(3.44 mH), 136.8 A | ||||
Adapted Z Ω | 3.44 mH | %Z (1 MVA base) | 846% | ||
Voltage | HVRT/LVRT | ||||
W1 parallel rate | W2 Series rate | Impedance (Determination) | |||
Applied Method | Parallel | Series mH | |||
130% | 0.77 | 0.23 | Two-step (HVRT) | 2.65 mH | 0.79 mH |
110% | 0.83 | 1.67 | Two-step (HVRT) | 2.86 mH | 0.58 mH |
90% | 0.9 | 0.1 | Two-step (LVRT) | 3.10 mH | 0.34 mH |
50% | 0.5 | 0.5 | One-step (LVRT) | 1.00 mH | 1.72 mH |
0 % | 0 | 1 | One-step (LVRT) | 0.01 mH | 3.44 mH |
Test No. | Test Condition | Test Results | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voltage (Percent Unit) | Duration Time | Voltage (Percent Unit) | Voltage | Duration Time | Current | |
Test 1 | 0.0 PU | 150 ms | 0.01 PU | 0.003 kV | 161 ms | 84 A |
Test 2 | 0.5 PU | 900 ms | 0.49 PU | 0.118 kV | 768 ms | 62 A |
Test 3 | 0.9 PU | 1500 ms | 0.94 PU | 0.208 kV | 1542 ms | 20 A |
Test | Test Condition | Test Results | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voltage (Percent Unit) | Duration Time | Voltage (Percent Unit) | Voltage | Duration Time | Current | |
Test 4 | 1.07 PU | 1350 ms | 1.09 PU | 0.24 kV | 1360 ms | 24 A |
Test 5 | 1.3 PU | 150 ms | 1.3 PU | 0.28 kV | 167 ms | 43 A |
(Average within 10 min) Current | (Average within 10 min) 3 Phase Voltage | (Average within 10 min) Capacity |
---|---|---|
21 A | 378 V | 7.57 kW/1.26 kWh |
Before the Test (Steady State) | During the Test (Transient) | After the Test (Steady State) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | WT + Grid Output Current | Test Voltage | Duration Time | WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | ||
Inrush | Steady State | |||||||
54 A | 20 A | 0.219 kV 0.99 PU | 83 A | 0.00 kV 0.0 PU | 158 ms | Within 1 s: 32 A After 1 s: 22 A | 0.218 kV 0.99 PU |
Before the Test (Steady State) | During the Test (Transient) | After the Test (Steady State) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | WT + Grid Output Current | Test Voltage | Duration Time | WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | ||
Inrush | Steady State | |||||||
71 A | 20 A | 0.219 kV 0.99 PU | 62 A | 0.115 kV 0.52 PU | 768 ms | Within1 s: 33 A After 1s: 16 A | 0.216 kV 0.98 PU |
Before the Test (Steady State) | During the Test (Transient) | After the Test (Steady State) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | WT + Grid Output Current | Test Voltage | Duration Time | WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | ||
Inrush | Steady State | |||||||
23 A | 21 A | 0.219 kV 0.99 PU | 21 A | 0.204 kV 0.927 pu | 1515 ms | Within 1 s: 21 A After 1 s: 21 A | 0.219 kV 0.99 PU |
Before the Test (Steady State) | During the Test (Transient) | After the Test (Steady State) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | WT + Grid Output Current | Test Voltage | Duration Time | WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | ||
Inrush | Steady State | |||||||
54 A | 21 A | 0.219 V 0.99 PU | 25 A | 0.241 kV 1.09 PU | 1517 ms | Within 1 s: 21 A After 1 s: 21 A | 0.219 V 0.99 PU |
Before the Test (Steady State) | During the Test (Transient) | After the Test (Steady State) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | WT + Grid Output Current | Test Voltage | Duration Time | WT Output Current | Phase Voltage | |
Inrush | Steady State | ||||||
82 A | 21 A | 0.219 V 0.99 PU | 34 A | 0.281 kV 1.27 PU | 168 ms | Within 1 s: 22 A After 1 s: 22 A | 0.219 V 0.99 PU |
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Kim, B.; Nam, Y.-H.; Ryu, K.-S.; Kim, D.-J. Implementation Strategy of Test Facility Based on Auto-Transformer for LVRT/HVRT Evaluation of Large-Scale Wind Turbine. Energies 2023, 16, 4194. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16104194
Kim B, Nam Y-H, Ryu K-S, Kim D-J. Implementation Strategy of Test Facility Based on Auto-Transformer for LVRT/HVRT Evaluation of Large-Scale Wind Turbine. Energies. 2023; 16(10):4194. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16104194
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Byungki, Yang-Hyun Nam, Kyung-Sang Ryu, and Dae-Jin Kim. 2023. "Implementation Strategy of Test Facility Based on Auto-Transformer for LVRT/HVRT Evaluation of Large-Scale Wind Turbine" Energies 16, no. 10: 4194. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16104194
APA StyleKim, B., Nam, Y. -H., Ryu, K. -S., & Kim, D. -J. (2023). Implementation Strategy of Test Facility Based on Auto-Transformer for LVRT/HVRT Evaluation of Large-Scale Wind Turbine. Energies, 16(10), 4194. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16104194