Novel Autonomous Control of Grid-Forming DGs to Realize 100% Renewable Energy Grids
Abstract
The grid-forming distributed generators (GFM-DGs) have attracted much attention as a key technology for realizing 100% renewable energy grids. This paper presents a novel control strategy to ensure the reliable operation of a renewable energy source (RES)-based GFM-DG even during weather variations. The GFM-DG connects a RES to the grid via source- and grid-side converters, with the converters’ common DC-link voltage <inline-formula> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$V_{DC}$ </tex-math></inline-formul...
Description / Details
The grid-forming distributed generators (GFM-DGs) have attracted much attention as a key technology for realizing 100% renewable energy grids. This paper presents a novel control strategy to ensure the reliable operation of a renewable energy source (RES)-based GFM-DG even during weather variations. The GFM-DG connects a RES to the grid via source- and grid-side converters, with the converters’ common DC-link voltage <inline-formula> <tex-math notation="LaTeX"> </tex-math></inline-formula> indicating the power balance between the RES and the grid. We begin by identifying the limitation of conventional strategies in maintaining <inline-formula> <tex-math notation="LaTeX"> </tex-math></inline-formula> against severe weather. To address the limitation, we propose a coordinated strategy for both source- and grid-side converters to regulate <inline-formula> <tex-math notation="LaTeX"> </tex-math></inline-formula> cooperatively, ensuring GFM-DG stability even in adverse weather conditions while also achieving decentralized power sharing and contributions to frequency inertia and damping. The proposed strategy is applicable to photovoltaic- and wind turbine-based generators, as well as energy storage systems. A guideline for control parameter design and stability margin analysis for weather conditions are also provided. The effectiveness of the proposed strategy is validated via small-signal analysis and simulation case studies under various conditions of 100% renewable energy grids, characterized by severe weather, load demand changes, actual line impedances, and a grid fault.
Source: Semantic Scholar - IEEE Transactions on Smart Grid (20 citations) PDF: N/A Original Link: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/22e310c633e896d90f6ae70b92286b3c629e6230
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Apr 16, 2026
Computer Science
Peer Reviewed
0