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System Integration Analysis for Modular Solid-State Substations

Mueller, Jacob M.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Flicker, Jack D.; Garcia Rodriguez, Luciano A.; Binder, Andrew B.; Ropp, Michael E.; Gill, Lee G.; Palacios, Felipe N.; Rashkin, Lee; Dow, Andrew R.; Elliott, Ryan T.

Structural modularity is critical to solid-state transformer (SST) and solid-state power substation (SSPS) concepts, but operational aspects related to this modularity are not yet fully understood. Previous studies and demonstrations of modular power conversion systems assume identical module compositions, but dependence on module uniformity undercuts the value of the modular framework. In this project, a hierarchical control approach was developed for modular SSTs which achieves system-level objectives while ensuring equitable power sharing between nonuniform building block modules. This enables module replacements and upgrades which leverage circuit and device technology advancements to improve system-level performance. The functionality of the control approach is demonstrated in detailed time-domain simulations. Results of this project provide context and strategic direction for future LDRD projects focusing on technologies supporting the SST crosscut outcome of the resilient energy systems mission campaign.

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Visualizing the Inter-Area Modes of the Western Interconnection

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Elliott, Ryan T.; Schoenwald, David A.

This paper presents a visualization technique for incorporating eigenvector estimates with geospatial data to create inter-area mode shape maps. For each point of measurement, the method specifies the radius, color, and angular orientation of a circular map marker. These characteristics are determined by the elements of the right eigenvector corresponding to the mode of interest. The markers are then overlaid on a map of the system to create a physically intuitive visualization of the mode shape. This technique serves as a valuable tool for differentiating oscillatory modes that have similar frequencies but different shapes. This work was conducted within the Western Interconnection Modes Review Group (WIMRG) in the Western Electric Coordinating Council (WECC). For testing, we employ the WECC 2021 Heavy Summer base case, which features a high-fidelity, industry standard dynamic model of the North American Western Interconnection. Mode estimates are produced via eigen-decomposition of a reduced-order state matrix identified from simulated ringdown data. The results provide improved physical intuition about the spatial characteristics of the inter-area modes. In addition to offline applications, this visualization technique could also enhance situational awareness for system operators when paired with online mode shape estimates.

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Real Power Modulation Strategies for Transient Stability Control

IEEE Access

Elliott, Ryan T.; Choi, Hyungjin C.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.; Nguyen, Tam

Transient stability control of power systems is based on actions that are taken automatically following a disturbance to ensure that the system remains in synchronism. Examples of such measures include generator rejection and the insertion of dynamic braking resistors. Methods like these are designed to rapidly absorb excess energy or otherwise alter the generation-demand balance at key points in the system. While these methods are often effective, they lack the ability to inject real power to compensate for a deficit. Utility-scale inverter-based resources, particularly energy storage systems, enable bidirectional modulation of real power with the bandwidth necessary to provide synchronizing torque. These resources, and the control strategies they enable, have garnered substantial research interest. This paper provides a critical review of research on real power modulation strategies for transient stability control. The design of these control strategies is heavily informed by the methods used to assess changes in the transient stability margins. Rigorously assessing these changes is difficult because the dynamics of large-scale power systems are inherently nonlinear. The well-known equal-area criterion is physically intuitive, but conceptual extensions are necessary for multi-machine systems. So-called direct methods of transient stability analysis offer a more general alternative; however, these methods require many simplifying assumptions and have difficulty incorporating detailed system dynamics. In this paper, we discuss data-driven methods for offline stability assessment based on Koopman operator theory.

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The Power and Energy Storage Systems Toolbox–PSTess (V1.0)

Elliott, Ryan T.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.; Choi, Hyungjin C.; Nguyen, Tam N.

This document describes the Power and Energy Storage Systems Toolbox for MATLAB, abbreviated as PSTess. This computing package is a fork of the Power Systems Toolbox (PST). PST was originally developed at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and later upgraded by Dr. Graham Rogers at Cherry Tree Scientific Software. While PSTess shares a common lineage with PST Version 3.0, it is a substantially different application. This document supplements the main PST manual by describing the features and models that are unique to PSTess. As the name implies, the main distinguishing characteristic of PSTess is its ability to model inverter-based energy storage systems (ESS). The model that enables this is called ess.m , and it serves the dual role of representing ESS operational constraints and the generator/converter interface. As in the WECC REGC_A model, the generator/converter interface is modeled as a controllable current source with the ability to modulate both real and reactive current. The model ess.m permits four-quadrant modulation, which allows it to represent a wide variety of inverter-based resources beyond energy storage when paired with an appropriate supplemental control model. Examples include utility-scale photovoltaic (PV) power plants, Type 4 wind plants, and static synchronous compensators (STATCOM). This capability is especially useful for modeling hybrid plants that combine energy storage with renewable resources or FACTS devices.

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A real power injection control strategy for improving transient stability

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Ojetola, Samuel; Wold, Josh; Trudnowski, Daniel; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Elliott, Ryan T.

Transient stability is highly correlated to the inertia connected to the synchronous grid. Most of the modern control schemes for maintaining transient stability involve generator tripping schemes. However, these type of schemes may become difficult to implement because of the inertia reduction associated with the increase in inverter-based and distributed generation. This paper presents the effect of using machine acceleration feedback in a real-power injection control scheme to improve transient stability without generator tripping. This scheme is based on the equal area criterion and tested on a one machine infinite bus and a two machine system. Its applicability in a multimachine power system is demonstrated on a reduced-order western North American power system. Simulation results indicate that the proposed control strategy provides a simple and effective method for improving transient stability.

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Forced oscillations in the western interconnection with the pacific dc intertie wide area damping controller

2020 IEEE Power and Energy Society Innovative Smart Grid Technologies Conference, ISGT 2020

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Pierre, Brian J.; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Neely, Jason C.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.

Forced oscillations in power systems are of particular interest when they interact and reinforce inter-area oscillations. This paper determines how a previously proposed inter-area damping controller mitigates forced oscillations. The damping controller modulates active power on the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) based on phasor measurement units (PMU) frequency measurements. The primary goal of the controller is to improve the small signal stability of the north south B mode in the North American Western Interconnection (WI). The paper presents small signal stability analysis in a reduced order system, time-domain simulations of a detailed representation of the WI and actual system test results to demonstrate that the PDCI damping controller provides effective damping to forced oscillations in the frequency range below 1 Hz.

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Design of the Pacific DC Intertie Wide Area Damping Controller

IEEE Transactions on Power Systems

Pierre, Brian J.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Neely, Jason C.

This paper describes the design and implementation of a proof-of-concept Pacific dc Intertie (PDCI) wide area damping controller and includes system test results on the North American Western Interconnection (WI). To damp inter-area oscillations, the controller modulates the power transfer of the PDCI, a ±500 kV dc transmission line in the WI. The control system utilizes real-time phasor measurement unit (PMU) feedback to construct a commanded power signal which is added to the scheduled power flow for the PDCI. After years of design, simulations, and development, this controller has been implemented in hardware and successfully tested in both open and closed-loop operation. The most important design specifications were safe, reliable performance, no degradation of any system modes in any circumstances, and improve damping to the controllable modes in the WI. The main finding is that the controller adds significant damping to the modes of the WI and does not adversely affect the system response in any of the test cases. The primary contribution of this paper, to the state of the art research, is the design methods and test results of the first North American real-time control system that uses wide area PMU feedback.

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Bulk Power System Dynamics with Varying Levels of Synchronous Generators and Grid-Forming Power Inverters

Conference Record of the IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference

Pierre, Brian J.; Villegas Pico, Hugo N.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Flicker, Jack D.; Lin, Yashen; Johnson, Brian B.; Eto, Joseph H.; Lasseter, Robert H.; Ellis, Abraham E.

Inverters using phase-locked loops for control depend on voltages generated by synchronous machines to operate. This might be problematic if much of the conventional generation fleet is displaced by inverters. To solve this problem, grid-forming control for inverters has been proposed as being capable of autonomously regulating grid voltages and frequency. Presently, the performance of bulk power systems with massive penetration of grid-forming inverters has not been thoroughly studied as to elucidate benefits. Hence, this paper presents inverter models with two grid-forming strategies: virtual oscillator control and droop control. The two models are specifically developed to be used in positive-sequence simulation packages and have been implemented in PSLF. The implementations are used to study the performance of bulk power grids incorporating inverters with gridforming capability. Specifically, simulations are conducted on a modified IEEE 39-bus test system and the microWECC test system with varying levels of synchronous and inverter-based generation. The dynamic performance of the tested systems with gridforming inverters during contingency events is better than cases with only synchronous generation.

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Executive Summary to PDCI Oscillation Damping Controller Software Documentation

Schoenwald, David A.; Rawlins, Charles R.; Schoenwald, David A.; Pierre, Brian J.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe W.; Elliott, Ryan T.

This report serves as the executive summary to the comprehensive document that describes the software, control logic, and operational functions of the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) Oscillation Damping Controller. The purpose of the damping controller (DCON) is to mitigate inter-area oscillations in the Western Interconnection (WI) by active improvement of oscillatory mode damping using phasor measurement unit (PMU) feedback to modulate power flow in the PDCI. This report provides the high level descriptions, diagrams, and charts to receive a basic understanding of the organization and structure of the DCON software. This report complements the much longer comprehensive software document, and it does not include any proprietary information as the more comprehensive report does. The level of detail provided by the comprehensive report on the software documentation is intended to assist with the process needed to obtain compliance for North American Electric Reliability Corporation Critical Infrastructure Protection (NERC-CIP) as a Bulk energy system Cyber Asset (BCA) device. That report organizes, summarizes, and presents the charts, figures, and flow diagrams that detail the organization and function of the damping controller software. The PDCI Wide-Area Damping Controller is the result of a collaboration between Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Montana Tech University (MTU), and the Department of Energy (DOE).

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Time synchronization in wide area damping control of power systems

2018 International Conference on Probabilistic Methods Applied to Power Systems, PMAPS 2018 - Proceedings

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Pierre, Brian J.; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.

Synchrophasor data, now prevalent in power systems around the world, is enabling the development of applications such as wide area control systems (WACS). Because synchrophasor data is transmitted from dispersed locations it is only available to WACS after a certain delay and at irregular time intervals. This paper initially shows that these non-uniformities in the availability of the data cause the WACS output command to be non-smooth potentially affecting the actuator. Next, paper also shows how delays in the WACS input signal are translated into erroneous and inverted WACS output commands. Finally, the paper proposes exact time-synchronization of the data as a solution of the above problems to ensure that the control action is not compromised.

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Simulation results for the pacific DC intertie wide area damping controller

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Pierre, Brian J.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Elliott, Ryan T.; Schoenwald, David A.; Neely, Jason C.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.

This paper presents simulation results of a control scheme for damping inter-area oscillations using high-voltage DC (HVDC) power modulation. The control system utilizes realtime synchrophasor feedback to construct a supplemental commanded power signal for the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) in the North American Western Interconnection (WI). A prototype of this controller has been implemented in hardware and, after multiple years of development, successfully tested in both open and closed-loop operation. This paper presents simulation results of the WI during multiple severe contingencies with the damping controller in both open and closed-loop. The primary results are that the controller adds significant damping to the controllable modes of the WI and that it does not adversely affect the system response in any of the simulated cases. Furthermore, the simulations show that a feedback signal composed of the frequency difference between points of measurement near the Washington-Oregon border and the California-Oregon border can be employed with similar results to a feedback signal constructed from measurements taken near the Washington-Oregon border and southern California. This is an important consideration because it allowed the control system to be designed without relying upon cross-system measurements, which would have introduced significant additional delay.

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Effect of time delay asymmetries in power system damping control

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Concepcion, Ricky J.; Neely, Jason C.; Schoenwald, David A.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Pierre, Brian J.; Elliott, Ryan T.

Distributed control compensation based on local and remote sensor feedback can improve small-signal stability in large distributed systems, such as electric power systems. Long distance remote measurements, however, are potentially subject to relatively long and uncertain network latencies. In this work, the issue of asymmetrical network latencies is considered for an active damping application in a two-area electric power system. The combined effects of latency and gain are evaluated in time domain simulation and in analysis using root-locus and the maximum singular value of the input sensitivity function. The results aid in quantifying the effects of network latencies and gain on system stability and disturbance rejection.

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Initial closed-loop testing results for the pacific DC intertie wide area damping controller

IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting

Trudnowski, Daniel; Pierre, Brian J.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Neely, Jason; Byrne, Raymond H.; Kosterev, Dmitry

Lightly damped electromechanical oscillations are a source of concern in the western interconnect. Recent development of a reliable real-time wide-area measurement system (WaMS) has enabled the potential for large-scale damping control approaches for stabilizing critical oscillation modes. a recent research project has focused on the development of a prototype feedback modulation controller for the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) aimed at stabilizing such modes. The damping controller utilizes real-time WaMS signals to form a modulation command for the DC power on the PDCI. This paper summarizes results from the first actual-system closed-loop tests. Results demonstrate desirable performance and improved modal damping consistent with previous model studies.

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Open-loop testing results for the pacific DC intertie wide area damping controller

2017 IEEE Manchester PowerTech, Powertech 2017

Pierre, Brian J.; Wilches-Bernal, Felipe; Schoenwald, David A.; Elliott, Ryan T.; Neely, Jason C.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Trudnowski, Daniel J.

This paper describes the initial open-loop operation of a prototype control system aimed at mitigating inter-area oscillations through active DC power modulation. The control system uses real-time synchrophasor feedback to construct a commanded power signal added to the scheduled power on the Pacific DC Intertie (PDCI) within the western North American power system (wNAPS). The control strategy is based upon nearly a decade of simulation, linear analysis, and actual system tests. The control system must add damping to all modes which are controllable and 'do no harm' to the AC grid. Tests were conducted in which the damping controller injected live probing signals into the PDCI controls to change the power flow on the PDCI by up to ±125 MW. While the probing tests are taking place, the damping controller recorded what it would have done if it were providing active damping. The tests demonstrate that the dynamic response of the DC system is highly desirable with a response time of 11 ms which is well within the desired range. The tests also verify that the overall transfer functions are consistent with past studies and tests. Finally, the tests show that the prototype controller behaves as expected and will improve damping in closed-loop operation.

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Results 1–25 of 64
Results 1–25 of 64