January 1, 2020
Journal Article

Wide-Area Measurement-Based Modal Decoupling for Power System Oscillation Damping

Abstract

Inter-area oscillation modes usually fall within the same frequency range of 0.1 to 1.0 Hz; thus, power oscillation damping (POD) control methods should avoid unnecessary excitation of weakly damped modes. This paper presents a decoupled control strategy to damp inter-area oscillations in the power grid. Pure oscillation mode signals are extracted from wide-area measurements and used as feedback input for POD actuators such as power system stabilizers or high-voltage direct current transmission. The decoupled control strategy is able to increase the damping of the concerned oscillation modes without deteriorating others. This proposed strategy could be implemented independently, or serve as a complement and work along with conventional POD controllers to damp concerned inter-area modes. The proposed method has been tested on a modied MinniWECC system. Extensive results indicate that inter-area oscillations can be successfully and precisely damped using the proposed decoupled strategy.

Revised: February 26, 2020 | Published: January 1, 2020

Citation

Fan R., S. Wang, R. Huang, J. Lian, and Z. Huang. 2020. Wide-Area Measurement-Based Modal Decoupling for Power System Oscillation Damping. Electric Power Systems Research 178. PNNL-SA-139779. doi:10.1016/j.epsr.2019.106022