dc.description.abstract |
AC electrical distribution system is presently dominating whose engineering foundations
were planned above hundred years ago. However, the debate between ac
and dc distribution system has started again due to the evolution of dc loads and
increasing use of renewable energy sources (RESs). Currently, depleting threat
of conventional fuels, growing energy demand and prices, and ecological changes
necessitate that considerable power to be produced through RESs. Microgrids are
modern form of distribution system which can function autonomously or in combination
with main supply grid. Microgrids can operate in low or medium voltage
range which have their own power generation with energy storage and loads. The
unique property of the microgrids is that they can work in islanded mode under
faulty grid conditions which increases the reliability of power supply. This inspires
that microgrid is an e ective way of power generation and consumption. In the
near future, the distribution system may consist of some interconnected microgrids
with local generation, storage and consumption of power.
Solar, wind and fuel cell technologies are playing an important role in electric power
generation among various renewable sources. Most of these sources are inherently
designed for dc or they are dc friendly. The growing use of these sources and fast
evolution of domestic appliances from ac to dc attracting dc microgrids in the
distribution system. DC microgrid system may be more e cient compared to the
ac system because the integration of RESs in dc requires less conversion stages
compared to ac. Additionally, the reactive power compensation and frequency
synchronization circuits are not required in dc microgrids.
DC microgrids are not exempted from the stability concerns. In the rst part
of this thesis, voltage stability of dc microgrid based on decentralized control architecture
is presented. Droop controllers are being used for voltage stability of
dc microgrids. But droop control is not e ective due to the error in steady state
voltages and load power variations. Further, the voltage deviation increases with
the increase in droop values which are not acceptable to the loads. Additionally,
proportional integral (PI) controllers are being used to realize droop control for the
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stability of dc microgrid. The main reason to use these control techniques is due
to easy implementation of their tuning method in industrial applications. However,
PI controllers cannot ensure global stability. They exhibit slower transient
response and control parameters cannot be optimized with load power variations.
To address the aforementioned limitation, sliding mode control (SMC) is proposed
for voltage stability of dc microgrid in this thesis. Main advantages of SMC are
high robustness, fast dynamic response and good stability for large load variations.
To analyze the stability and dynamic performance, mathematical model
of a dc microgrid is derived. Controllability and stability of the modeled system
are veri ed. Hitting, existence and stability conditions are veri ed through SM.
Modeled dynamics of the system are graphically plotted which shows that system
trajectories converge to the equilibrium point. Detailed simulations are carried out
to show the e ectiveness of SM controller and results are compared with droop
controller. SMC showed good voltage regulation performance in steady state condition.
The e ect of transient on a step load is also investigated which con rms
the good performance of the proposed controller. Further, a small scale practical
setup is developed, and results are presented.
In the second part of this thesis, distributed architecture using SM controller is
proposed for proportional load sharing in dc microgrid. The key objectives of
the dc microgrid include proportional load sharing and precise voltage regulation.
Droop controllers are based on decentralized control architecture which are not
e ective to achieve these objectives simultaneously due to the voltage error and
load power variations. Centralized controller can achieve these objectives using
high bandwidth communication link. However, it loses reliability due to the single
point failure. To address limitations, a distributed architecture using SM controller
utilizing low bandwidth communication is proposed in this thesis. Main
advantages are high reliability, load power sharing and precise voltage regulation.
To analyze the stability and dynamic performance, system model is developed
and its transversality, reachability and equivalent control condition are veri ed.
Furthermore, the dynamic behavior of the modeled system is investigated for underdamped
and critically damped response. Detailed simulation results are carried
out to show the e ectiveness of the proposed controller. |
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