Direct Power Control based on Point of Common Coupling Voltage Modulation for Grid-Tied AC Microgrid PV Inverter

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Osuva_Ahmad_Jhuma_Karimi_Pourdaryaei_Mekhilef_Mokhlis_Kauhaniemi_2022.pdf - Lopullinen julkaistu versio - 3.59 MB

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© The Authors. Published by IEEE. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License. For more information, see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
This research has been supported by the University of Vaasa under the Centralized Intelligent and Resilient Protection Schemes for Future Grids Applying 5G (CIRP-5G) research project funded by Business Finland with Grant No. 6937/31/2021. Some parts of this work were done in the SolarX research project funded by Business Finland with Grant No. 6844/31/2018.
In this paper, a direct power control (DPC) approach is proposed for grid-tied AC MG’s photovoltaic (PV) voltage source inverter (VSI) to regulate directly active and reactive powers by modulating microgrid’s (MG) point of common coupling (PCC) voltage. The proposed PCC voltage modulated (PVM) theory-based DPC method (PVMT-DPC) is composed of nonlinear PVM, nonlinear damping, conventional feedforward, and feedback PI controllers. For grid synchronization rather than employing phase-locked-loop (PLL) technology, in this study, direct power calculation of the PCC voltage and current is adopted. Subsequently, at PCC, the computed real and reactive powers are compared with reference powers in order to generate the VSI’s control signals using sinusoidal pulse width modulation (SPWM). Because of the absence of the PLL and DPC method adoption, the suggested controller has a faster convergence rate compared to traditional VSI power controllers. Additionally, it displays nearly zero steady-state power oscillations, which assures that MG’s power quality is improved significantly. To validate the proposed PVMT-DPC method’s performance real-time simulations are conducted via a real-time digital simulator (RTDS) for a variety of cases. The results demonstrate that PV VSI using the suggested PVMT-DPC approach can track the reference power quicker (0.055 s) along with very low steady-state power oscillations, and lower total harmonic distortion (THD) of 1.697% at VSI output current.

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2169-3536

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IEEE Access|10

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