Interaction Between Coordinated and Droop Control PV Inverters
Peter Lusis (1,3, 4), Lachlan L. H. Andrew (2), Ariel Liebman (1,3, and 4), Guido Tack (1,3, 4) ((1) Monash University, (2) The University of, Melbourne, (3) Monash Energy Institute, (4) Monash Grid Innovation Hub)

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how coordinated inverter control can improve voltage regulation and grid support in PV systems, highlighting its effectiveness and limitations in different network scenarios with high PV penetration.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes the deployment scenarios of coordinated inverter control, demonstrating its potential and constraints in mitigating voltage issues in PV-rich networks.
Findings
Coordinated inverters mitigate overvoltages in 85% of cases on a 114-node network.
Effectiveness decreases to 37% on a 906-node network with high passive inverter build-up.
Coordinated inverters can partially offset passive inverter responses during grid regulation.
Abstract
Autonomous droop control PV inverters have improved voltage regulation compared to the inverters without grid support functions, but more flexible control techniques will be required as the number of solar photovoltaic (PV) installations increases. This paper studies three inverter future deployment scenarios with droop control inverters, non-exporting inverters, and coordinated inverter control (CIC). The network operation and the interaction between various inverter control methods are studied by simulating inverter operation on two low-voltage networks. Considering 30% PV penetration as the base case, we demonstrate that coordinated inverters can mitigate overvoltages and voltage fluctuations caused by the tripping of passive inverters in 85% of PV location cases when at least as many coordinated as passive inverters are deployed on the 114-node test feeder. However, this rate…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
