Trajectory Tracking Wide-Area Control for Power Systems

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Elliott, Ryan Thomas

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Abstract

This dissertation reassesses traditional approaches to power system stabilization in the context of contemporary measurement and communication technology. Changes in bulk system dynamics driven by increases in power electronically-coupled generation and load pose challenges to existing control strategies. Rather than attempting to maintain a static equilibrium, we explore strategies that drive the system toward a desired trajectory. This approach emerges from a time-varying linearization of the equations of motion for a synchronous machine. First, we develop and demonstrate a generalized power system stabilizer architecture that incorporates local information with a real-time estimate of the speed of the center of inertia. This estimate is synthesized from data collected over wide-area measurement systems. We then turn our attention toward a new method for stabilizing transient disturbances by modulating the active power injected by inverter-based resources. The response of each inverter is calculated to drive the local bus voltage angle toward a trajectory that tracks the angle of the center of inertia. The results of this endeavor indicate that trajectory tracking control can improve both transient and small-signal stability, while also increasing tuning flexibility. In particular, we show that it is possible to decouple the effect of the control action on inter-area and local modes of oscillation from the effect on the frequency regulation mode.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020

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