With an ever-evolving power grid, concerns regarding how to maintain system stability, efficiency, and reliability remain constant because of increasing uncertainties and decreasing rotating inertia. To alleviate some of these concerns, demand response represents a viable solution and is virtually an untapped resource in the current power grid. This work describes a hierarchical control framework that allows coordination between distributed energy resources and demand response. This control framework is composed of two control layers: a coordination layer that ensures aggregations of resources are coordinated to achieve system objectives and a device layer that controls individual resources to assure the predetermined power profile is tracked in real time. Large-scale simulations are executed to study the hierarchical control, requiring advancements in simulation capabilities. Technical advancements necessary to investigate and answer control interaction questions, including the Framework for Network Co-Simulation platform and Arion modeling capability, are detailed. Insights into the interdependencies of controls across a complex system and how they must be tuned, as well as validation of the effectiveness of the proposed control framework, are yielded using a large-scale integrated transmission system model coupled with multiple distribution systems.
Revised: July 26, 2017 |
Published: July 3, 2017
Citation
Hansen J., T.W. Edgar, J.A. Daily, and D. Wu. 2017.Evaluating Transactive Controls of Integrated Transmission and Distribution Systems using the Framework for Network Co-Simulation. In American Control Conference (ACC 2017), May 24-26, 2017, Seattle, Washington, 4010-4017. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE.PNNL-SA-124258.doi:10.23919/ACC.2017.7963570