Large-Signal Stability of Power Systems with Mixtures of GFL, GFM and GSP Inverters
Yifan Zhang, Yaoxin Wang, Yunjie Gu, Yitong Li, Sijia Geng, Yue Zhu, Hsiao-Dong Chiang, Timothy C. Green

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the large-signal stability of power systems with mixed inverter types, introducing a manifold method and reduced-order models to evaluate stability boundaries and the stabilizing effects of GFM and GSP inverters.
Contribution
It develops a generalized large-signal model for heterogeneous inverters, employs a manifold method with reduced-order models to assess stability, and demonstrates the stabilizing impact of GFM and GSP inverters.
Findings
GFM and GSP inverters significantly improve stability when paired with GFL inverters.
The stability margin is maximized when GFM or GSP inverters are placed at the transmission line midpoint.
The proposed framework is validated through EMT simulations and hardware-in-the-loop experiments.
Abstract
Grid-following (GFL) inverters have very different large-signal stability characteristics to synchronous generators, and convenient concepts such as the equal-area criterion and global energy function do not apply in the same way. Existing studies mainly focus on the synchronization stability of an individual GFL inverter, while interactions between multiple inverters are less often addressed. This paper elucidates the interaction mechanisms between heterogeneous inverters, covering GFL, grid-forming (GFM), and grid-supporting (GSP) types, to determine the stability boundaries of systems with mixed inverter compositions. The generalized large-signal model for two-inverter systems is derived for various inverter combinations. This paper establishes that systems containing GFL inverters do not admit a global energy function, fundamentally limiting the applicability of traditional direct…
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