September 9, 2019
Conference Paper

Numerical Oscillation Prevention for PV Inverter Controllers in Quasi-Steady-State Simulators

Abstract

Droop-based PV inverter control methods are popular for preventing overvoltage in low voltage networks with high installations of PV solar. Quasi-steady-state simulators (QSTS) can be used to reduce the computational burden of conducting long-term techno-economic analyses of such PV inverter controllers. If dynamic models for droop-based controllers are directly implemented in QSTS, numerical oscillation occurs and the controllers fail to converge to their steady-state operation. In this paper, a power network sensitivity-based algorithm is proposed for preventing numerical oscillation while implementing active and reactive droop-based PV inverter controllers in quasisteady state simulation tool (e.g. in GridLAB-D). Convergence of the sensitivity-based algorithm is verified using a typical radial distribution feeder. It is found that all three controllers reached converged state in less than 15 iterations.

Revised: March 6, 2020 | Published: September 9, 2019

Citation

Duwadi K., F.B. Dos Reis, R. Mahat, R. Fourney, R. Tonkoski, T.M. Hansen, and B.P. Bhattarai. 2019. Numerical Oscillation Prevention for PV Inverter Controllers in Quasi-Steady-State Simulators. In Proceedings of the IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting (PESGM 2019), August 4-8, 2019, Atlanta, GA. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE. PNNL-SA-139435. doi:10.1109/PESGM40551.2019.8973451