Voltage dynamics of electric power systems in their closed loop operation

2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ilic ◽  
F.K. Mak
2013 ◽  
Vol 676 ◽  
pp. 227-230
Author(s):  
Qi Liang Zhang ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
Liu Yang

In this paper, a new topology of compensated AC regulated power supply (ACRPS) in electric power systems based on a high-frequency isolated transformer (HFIT) is proposed. In order to overcome the slow response and low accuracy of the existing ACRPS, the phase shift regulating control (PSRC) based on instantaneous value of voltage single closed loop is applied as well as the software phase locked loop (SPLL). The proposed ACRPS has been simulated in the case of the voltage fluctuation, harmonics and frequency shift with Matlab. The simulation results show that output voltage precision is controlled within 0.5% and total harmonic distribution (THD) can be limited to less than 1%. In a word, the feasibility of the proposed ACRPS is effectively verified.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 1688 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Birk Jones ◽  
Matthew Lave ◽  
William Vining ◽  
Brooke Marshall Garcia

An increase in Electric Vehicles (EV) will result in higher demands on the distribution electric power systems (EPS) which may result in thermal line overloading and low voltage violations. To understand the impact, this work simulates two EV charging scenarios (home- and work-dominant) under potential 2030 EV adoption levels on 10 actual distribution feeders that support residential, commercial, and industrial loads. The simulations include actual driving patterns of existing (non-EV) vehicles taken from global positioning system (GPS) data. The GPS driving behaviors, which explain the spatial and temporal EV charging demands, provide information on each vehicles travel distance, dwell locations, and dwell durations. Then, the EPS simulations incorporate the EV charging demands to calculate the power flow across the feeder. Simulation results show that voltage impacts are modest (less than 0.01 p.u.), likely due to robust feeder designs and the models only represent the high-voltage (“primary”) system components. Line loading impacts are more noticeable, with a maximum increase of about 15%. Additionally, the feeder peak load times experience a slight shift for residential and mixed feeders (≈1 h), not at all for the industrial, and 8 h for the commercial feeder.


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