A Network-Aware Evaluation of Distributed Energy Resource Control in Smart Distribution Systems
Houchao Gan

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how communication network conditions affect distributed energy resource control in smart distribution systems using a co-simulation framework, highlighting the importance of realistic network modeling.
Contribution
It introduces an implementation-driven evaluation method that incorporates packet-level communication delays into the assessment of a virtual power plant dispatch algorithm.
Findings
Ideal communication achieves accurate power tracking and voltage regulation.
Realistic communication delays cause oscillations and voltage violations.
Communication effects significantly influence distributed DER control performance.
Abstract
Distribution networks with high penetration of Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) increasingly rely on communication networks to coordinate grid-interactive control. While many distributed control schemes have been proposed, they are often evaluated under idealized communication assumptions, making it difficult to assess their performance under realistic network conditions. This work presents an implementation-driven evaluation of a representative virtual power plant (VPP) dispatch algorithm using a co-simulation framework that couples a linearized distribution-system model with packet-level downlink emulation in ns-3. The study considers a modified IEEE~37-node feeder with high photovoltaic penetration and a primal--dual VPP dispatch that simultaneously targets feeder-head active power tracking and voltage regulation. Communication effects are introduced only on the downlink path…
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