Consideration of Control-Loop Interaction in Transient Stability of Grid-Following Inverters using Bandwidth Separation Method
Yifan Zhang, Yunjie Gu, Yue Zhu, Yitong Li, Hsiao-Dong Chiang, Timothy C. Green

TL;DR
This paper introduces a bandwidth separation method to analyze and improve the transient stability of grid-following inverters by explicitly considering control-loop interactions, validated through HIL experiments.
Contribution
A novel asymptotic analysis approach that simplifies the nonlinear dynamics of inverter control loops, revealing how bandwidth choices affect transient stability.
Findings
Larger PLL bandwidth enhances fault resilience.
Larger DVC bandwidth improves tolerance to power fluctuations.
High TVC bandwidth mitigates PLL-DVC interaction effects.
Abstract
Grid-following inverters have been widely adopted as a grid interface for renewable energy, and ensuring their small-signal and large-signal stability is critical to modern power systems. Their large-signal, or transient, stability is a significant challenge to analyze because of the interaction of the phase-locked loop (PLL), which must maintain synchronism with various outer-loop controllers. Simple analysis in which outer-loop controllers are idealized is insufficient, and the interactions between the nonlinear dynamics of the PLL and the dynamics of the DC-link voltage control (DVC), as well as the AC terminal voltage control (TVC) when present, must be considered. An asymptotic analysis approach, termed the bandwidth separation method, is proposed. This method enables simplification and order reduction of the original differential equations when sufficient bandwidth separation…
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