A Brief Analysis on Microgrid Control

Author(s):  
Sheetal Chandak ◽  
Buddhadeva Sahoo ◽  
Pravat Kumar Rout ◽  
Sthitaprajna Mishra ◽  
Manohar Mishra
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Pouya Babahajiani ◽  
Lizhi Wang ◽  
Ji Liu ◽  
s Peng Zhang
Keyword(s):  

Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1031
Author(s):  
Maryam Nasri ◽  
Herbert L. Ginn ◽  
Mehrdad Moallem

This paper presents the implementation of an agent-based architecture suitable for the coordination of power electronic converters in stand-alone microgrids. To this end, a publish-subscribe agent architecture was utilized as a distributed microgrid control platform. Over a distributed hash table (DHT) searching overlay, the publish-subscribe architecture was identified based on a numerical analysis as a scalable agent-based technology for the distributed real-time coordination of power converters in microgrids. The developed framework was set up to deploy power-sharing distributed optimization algorithms while keeping a deterministic time period of a few tens of milliseconds for a system with tens of converters and when multiple events might happen concurrently. Several agents participate in supervisory control to regulate optimum power-sharing for the converters. To test the design, a notional shipboard system, including several converters, was used as a case study. Results of implementing the agent-based publish-subscribe control system using the Java Agent Development Framework (JADE) are presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 5695
Author(s):  
Mehrdad Aslani ◽  
Hamed Hashemi-Dezaki ◽  
Abbas Ketabi

Smart microgrids (SMGs), as cyber–physical systems, are essential parts of smart grids. The SMGs’ cyber networks facilitate efficient system operation. However, cyber failures and interferences might adversely affect the SMGs. The available studies about SMGs have paid less attention to SMGs’ cyber–physical features compared to other subjects. Although a few current research works have studied the cyber impacts on SMGs’ reliability, there is a research gap about reliability evaluation simultaneously concerning all cyber failures and interferences under various cyber network topologies and renewable distributions scenarios. This article aims to fill such a gap by developing a new Monte Carlo simulation-based reliability assessment method considering cyber elements’ failures, data/information transmission errors, and routing errors under various cyber network topologies. Considering the microgrid control center (MGCC) faults in comparion to other failures and interferences is one of the major contributions of this study. The reliability evaluation of SMGs under various cyber network topologies, particularly based on an MGCC’s redundancy, highlights this research’s advantages. Moreover, studying the interactions of uncertainties for cyber systems and distributed generations (DGs) under various DG scenarios is another contribution. The proposed method is applied to a test system using actual historical data. The comparative test results illustrate the advantages of the proposed method.


Author(s):  
Pietro Danzi ◽  
Cedomir Stefanovic ◽  
Lexuan Meng ◽  
Josep M. Guerrero ◽  
Petar Popovski
Keyword(s):  

Energies ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Short ◽  
Fathi Abugchem ◽  
Muneeb Dawood

2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 2484-2492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Velin Kounev ◽  
David Tipper ◽  
Attila Altay Yavuz ◽  
Brandon M. Grainger ◽  
Gregory F. Reed

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