Abstract:
Access to electricity is one of the key factors indicating the socio-economic status
of any community. Reliable and adequate provision of electricity is mandatory for
improved standards of living including better health, education, transport, agriculture and
employment opportunities. Unfortunately, according to International Energy Agency,
over 1.1 billion people around the world lack access to any electricity out of which 85
percent reside in rural areas of developing world. Electrification of these remote rural
communities through national grid interconnection is not economically feasible for many
developing countries due to high cost associated with the development of generation,
transmission and distribution infrastructure. Alternatively, DC microgrids implemented
with distributed generation and low voltage distribution are becoming very popular for
low cost rural electrification. However, current implementations are largely suboptimal
due to high distribution losses associated with their centralized architecture and their
inability to support high power community loads. In this work, a novel distributed DC
microgrid architecture which allows a scalable approach with minimal upfront investment
to fulfill rural electricity needs along with the provision of higher powers for communal
loads and beyond subsistence provisioning of electrical power is proposed. The
architecture is capable to work entirely on solar energy with power delivery capability to
individual consumers and added inherent ability to integrate resources to power up larger
loads for communal/commercial applications. The proposed microgrid architecture
consists of a cluster of multiple nanogrids (households), where each nanogrid has its own
PV generation and battery storage along with bi-directional connectivity to the microgrid.
Thus, each nanogrid can work independently in islanded mode along with the provision
of sharing its resources with the community through the bidirectional converter. In the
proposed architecture, the bi-directional power flow capability is implemented through a
modified flyback converter. A decentralized control methodology is also proposed to
ensure a communication-less, yet coordinated control among the distributed resources in
multiple nanogrids. The microgrid is evaluated for optimal distribution voltage level,
conductor size and interconnection scheme between nanogrids using Newton-Raphson
analysis modified for DC power flow. Various scenarios for power sharing among the
contributing nanogrids and communal load power allocation are analyzed from operation
and control prospective to validate the architecture and its performance. Further, an
optimal framework for the planning of distributed generation and storage resources in
each nanogrid with respect to time varying profiles of region-specific temperature and
irradiance is also presented to ensure the better resource utilization. A scaled version of
the proposed architecture is implemented on hardware, while the efficacy of control
methodology is validated on MATLAB/Simulink and hardware in loop facilities at
microgrid laboratory in Aalborg University. The proposed distributed architecture along
with decentralized control can be considered as a promising solution for the future rural
electrification implementations in developing regions.