Towards Optimal System Scheduling With Synthetic Inertia Provision From Wind Turbines
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Date
2020-09Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
The undergoing transition from conventional to converter-interfaced renewable generation leads to significant challenges in maintaining frequency stability due to declining system inertia. In this paper, a novel control framework for Synthetic Inertia (SI) provision from Wind Turbines (WTs) is proposed, which eliminates the secondary frequency dip and allows the dynamics of SI from WTs to be analytically integrated into the system frequency dynamics. Furthermore, analytical system frequency constraints with SI provision from WTs are developed and incorporated into a stochastic system scheduling model, which enables the provision of SI from WTs to be dynamically optimized on a system level. Several case studies are carried out on a Great Britain 2030 power system with different penetration levels of wind generation and inclusion of frequency response requirements in order to assess the performance of the proposed model and analyze the influence of the improved SI control scheme on the potential secondary frequency dip. The results demonstrate that the inclusion of SI provision from WTs into Unit Commitment (UC) can drastically impact the overall system costs. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
IEEE Transactions on Power SystemsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
IEEESubject
Frequency control; Rotors; Aerodynamics; Dynamic scheduling; Time-frequency analysis; Maximum power point trackers; Power system stability; Synthetic inertia; frequency response; unit commitment; recovery effect; secondary frequency dipOrganisational unit
09481 - Hug, Gabriela / Hug, Gabriela
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