Improved Active and Reactive Control of a Small Wind Turbine System Connected to the Grid
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. System Description
- PMSG: Power generation, with voltage and frequency proportional to the rotation speed of the shaft, that is, the wind speed. Minimum and maximum output voltage 40 and 120 V respectively. Nominal speed 1000 rpm, for wind speed 11.6 m/s.
- FBR: Uncontrolled three-phase 6-pulse bridge. It aims at rectifying and smoothing the output voltage of the wind turbine to provide a DC voltage, regardless of the wind speed.
- IBC: Finding the optimum point of operation of the wind turbine using MPPT methods. The use of an interleaved type converter enables more power at lower cost and a reduction in ripple.
- DC Bus: Separation of the two subsystems and intermediate energy storage to control active power supply to the grid. The total capacity is 10 mF.
- INV: Three-phase inverter with IGBT semiconductor switches (single module) and SVPWM pulsing method. It aims to convert the DC voltage at its input, to AC at the output and to control the active and reactive power injected to the grid, through the parameters m (modulation width) and δ (phase difference between the mains voltage and the basic harmonic voltage of the inverter).
- LI: Three single phase inductors with 2 mH induction. A sufficiently large induction was chosen so that there are correspondingly large margins for adjusting the angle δ.
- TF: Three single phase transformers, with a 1:13 lifting ratio. In addition to lifting, they offer a galvanic isolation between the inverter and the grid, essential for the safe operation of the system in a laboratory environment.
- CG: Three capacitors, which are aiming to suppress the higher harmonics of the current and are permanently connected to the side of the network, compensate part of the reactive power.
3. Control Architecture
- vai: basic voltage harmonic of inverter’s output
- vag: grid voltage
- L: interconnection inductor
4. Investigation of PI Parameters
- Starting from an arbitrary value of KP and for KI = 0. Based on the above analysis, KP is positive and it affects the speed at which PI output reaches the reference signal, something that is well known from control theory.
- A random series of extreme transitions is assigned to the system. If the system is unstable or the variables are congruent with the constraints, at any time, KP is reduced. Otherwise, KP is increased. Extreme transitions are those between extreme states or points of operations, which in this case are {p, q} = {0, 0}, {1000, 0}, {0, 800}, {1000, 800} {[W], [VAR]}.
- Step 2 is repeated until the system is close to the marginal stability or limitations. Let be the critical gain Ku = KP for this situation. In addition, for this KP the Tu of the oscillation of the variables are calculated.
- From the equations of Table 1 (Ziegler-Nichols Method), the values of KP and KI are calculated, according to the control method. In this case PI controller is used, since PID was vulnerable to instability.
- Based on the values of Step 4, small changes are made to optimize the response. Typically, ±15% of the original calculated value.
5. DC Bus Auto-Charging and Reactive Power Injection
- When the voltage of DC Bus is less than ~15V, antiparallel diodes are forward biased and start conducting, charging the bus.
- After that, inverter can modulate its voltage output, so that power flows from grid to the bus, by utilizing a negative δ value, hence a negative P value.
- Increased stability and better transient behavior
- Reduced transmission losses
- Reduced emissions of greenhouse gases
6. System Simulation and Experimental Results
- t = [0, 0.1] sec. control is offline and the PLL is synchronized with the grid’s frequency and phase.
- t = [0.1, 0.6] sec. the DC Bus is charging from 0 to 120 V. The overshoot is less that 135 V, which is acceptable since the capacitors of the DC Bus were designed for 200 V.
- t = [0.6, 1.5] sec. both active and reactive power are set to zero. Since voltage of the DC Bus is considered constant at 120 V, input active power is defined only by the current of CCS (independent current source).
- t = [1.5, 3.5] sec. active power is set to 1000 W (or CCS reference current is set to 8.3 A) and reactive power is set to 800 VAR.
- t > 3.5 sec. active power is set to 0 W and reactive to 800 VAR.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Controller | KP | KI | KD |
---|---|---|---|
P | 0.5 Ku | - | - |
PI | 0.45 Ku | Tu/1.2 | - |
PD | 0.8 Ku | - | Tu/8 |
PID | 0.6 Ku | Tu/2 | Tu/8 |
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Papadopoulos, T.; Tatakis, E.; Koukoulis, E. Improved Active and Reactive Control of a Small Wind Turbine System Connected to the Grid. Resources 2019, 8, 54. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010054
Papadopoulos T, Tatakis E, Koukoulis E. Improved Active and Reactive Control of a Small Wind Turbine System Connected to the Grid. Resources. 2019; 8(1):54. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010054
Chicago/Turabian StylePapadopoulos, Theofilos, Emmanuel Tatakis, and Efthymios Koukoulis. 2019. "Improved Active and Reactive Control of a Small Wind Turbine System Connected to the Grid" Resources 8, no. 1: 54. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010054
APA StylePapadopoulos, T., Tatakis, E., & Koukoulis, E. (2019). Improved Active and Reactive Control of a Small Wind Turbine System Connected to the Grid. Resources, 8(1), 54. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010054