Open Access
Distributed secondary control of battery energy storage systems in a stand‐alone microgrid
Author(s) -
Shotorbani Amin Mohammadpour,
MohammadiIvatloo Behnam,
Wang Liwei,
GhassemZadeh Saeid,
Hosseini Seyed Hossein
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
iet generation, transmission and distribution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.92
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1751-8695
pISSN - 1751-8687
DOI - 10.1049/iet-gtd.2018.0105
Subject(s) - microgrid , voltage droop , state of charge , renewable energy , automatic frequency control , energy storage , distributed generation , controller (irrigation) , computer science , control theory (sociology) , decentralised system , voltage , engineering , power (physics) , control (management) , battery (electricity) , control engineering , electrical engineering , voltage source , telecommunications , physics , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , agronomy , biology
The conventional hierarchical control in an islanded microgrid (MG) does not consider the long time‐span dynamics of distributed storages (DSs). The main challenge in control of battery energy storage systems (BESSs) is different levels of stored energy in terms of state of charge (SoC). In power droop control, the energy of the BESSs with lower initial SoC is drained earlier, and their capacities become unachievable. Moreover, using droop control to balance the SoC of BESSs, deviates the steady state frequency and voltage from the nominal values. However, restoration of the MG frequency employing the conventional distributed secondary controllers disturbs SoC‐balancing, since SoC of BESSs are ignored. In this paper, a new distributed storage secondary controller (DSSC) scheme is designed for restoration of the voltage and frequency of a stand‐alone MG, and to provide power‐sharing and SoC‐balancing, using a distributed cooperative architecture. The cooperative DSs are controllable and exchange the information with neighbor DSs through a communication network. The unknown output power of the uncooperative renewable distributed generation (DG) is considered as external disturbance to the DSSC. The designed DSSC is robust against the variation of the communication configuration, and eliminates the necessity to communicate with uncontrollable DGs and loads.