Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4968367 Sustainable Energy, Grids and Networks 2016 23 Pages PDF
Abstract
In three-phase Low Voltage (LV) networks, distributed photovoltaic (PV) units can contribute to voltage unbalance mitigation in case they are connected with the use of three-phase inverters integrating unbalance mitigation control schemes. This paper presents a probabilistic framework that simulates the time-varying action of voltage magnitude and unbalance mitigation schemes, locally implemented by PV inverters in LV feeders. The scope includes evaluating the effect of such strategies, in the context of a long-term techno-economic planning of the LV network, and characterizing LV network operation for increasing the observability of state estimation techniques applied in the Medium Voltage level. The presented framework evaluates the action of four distributed control schemes in an extensive range of possible network states assembled with the use of feeder-specific smart metering (SM) data. The simulation of a real LV feeder with distributed PV generation and historic SM measurements is presented. A control strategy that acts resistively towards the negative- and zero-sequence voltage components, without modifying the total nodal injected power (three-phase damping control strategy), results to be more effective compared with traditionally applied voltage control schemes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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