A Discussion on Stabilization of Frequency Control for Power Systems
Binh-Minh Nguyen, Ngoc Tran-Huynh, Michihiro Kawanishi, Tatsuo, Narikiyo

TL;DR
This paper explores decentralized frequency control in large-scale power systems, proposing passivity and generalized frequency variable theories to ensure stability without extensive network knowledge.
Contribution
It introduces passivity and GFV-based control methods for decentralized frequency stabilization, extending to systems with unknown communication delays.
Findings
Passivity theory guarantees stability via passive controllers.
GFV approach provides stability conditions through inequalities.
Numerical simulations validate the proposed control strategies.
Abstract
How to practically maintain the frequency stability of large-scale power systems by a decentralized way is a simple but non-trivial question. In other words, is it possible to design any local controller without understanding the other controlled areas and with less understanding of network structure? With respect to the special properties of physical interaction between the local areas, this paper suggests two existing theories for tackling this issue. Firstly, passivity theory is shown to be a candidate for frequency control problem using swing equation. Based on the passivity of swing dynamics, it is possible to guarantee the system stability by designing for each local area a passive controller. We further extend the passivity approach to the hierarchically decentralized control system with unknown communication delay. Secondly, we discuss the application of generalized frequency…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrequency Control in Power Systems · Power System Optimization and Stability · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
