Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators

As the share of wind power in the power system rises, synchronous generators in traditional power plants are taken out of the grid and replaced by a large number of wind turbines. Most modern wind turbines utilize a power electronic interface between the generator and grid to allow variable speed op...

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Main Author: Overjordet, Amund Strømnes
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for elkraftteknikk 2014
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-26765
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-ntnu-267652014-10-01T04:57:18ZSynthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous GeneratorsengOverjordet, Amund StrømnesNorges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for elkraftteknikkInstitutt for elkraftteknikk2014As the share of wind power in the power system rises, synchronous generators in traditional power plants are taken out of the grid and replaced by a large number of wind turbines. Most modern wind turbines utilize a power electronic interface between the generator and grid to allow variable speed operation of the turbine. By introducing the power electronic interface the wind turbine do not contribute to the rotational mass of the system or the frequency control. When the share of wind power becomes significant, the primary frequency response are influenced and the activation of primary reserves are challenged. To meet the demand for contribution to rotating mass, synthetic inertia emulation is proposed as a solution. There are numerous studies showing that synthetic inertia provides an important response from a frequency stability point of view. However, these models utilize weak representations of the grid, losing information about rotor angle stability. In this thesis a higher order simulation model is built in Simulink/Matlab to evaluate impacts on rotor angle stability from utilization of synthetic inertia. The main conclusions from the performed simulations are that the phase of the inertial response determines if the system damping is reduced, and that the inertia emulation should counteract frequency changes, not deviations. Also it is shown that the aggressiveness of the inverter tuning largely influences the damping of the oscillations in the system. However, a controller tuning is found where the system damping is acceptable and the inertial contribution from the wind farm is significant. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-26765Local ntnudaim:11517application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description As the share of wind power in the power system rises, synchronous generators in traditional power plants are taken out of the grid and replaced by a large number of wind turbines. Most modern wind turbines utilize a power electronic interface between the generator and grid to allow variable speed operation of the turbine. By introducing the power electronic interface the wind turbine do not contribute to the rotational mass of the system or the frequency control. When the share of wind power becomes significant, the primary frequency response are influenced and the activation of primary reserves are challenged. To meet the demand for contribution to rotating mass, synthetic inertia emulation is proposed as a solution. There are numerous studies showing that synthetic inertia provides an important response from a frequency stability point of view. However, these models utilize weak representations of the grid, losing information about rotor angle stability. In this thesis a higher order simulation model is built in Simulink/Matlab to evaluate impacts on rotor angle stability from utilization of synthetic inertia. The main conclusions from the performed simulations are that the phase of the inertial response determines if the system damping is reduced, and that the inertia emulation should counteract frequency changes, not deviations. Also it is shown that the aggressiveness of the inverter tuning largely influences the damping of the oscillations in the system. However, a controller tuning is found where the system damping is acceptable and the inertial contribution from the wind farm is significant.
author Overjordet, Amund Strømnes
spellingShingle Overjordet, Amund Strømnes
Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
author_facet Overjordet, Amund Strømnes
author_sort Overjordet, Amund Strømnes
title Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
title_short Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
title_full Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
title_fullStr Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
title_full_unstemmed Synthetic Inertia from Wind Farms - Impacts on Rotor Angle Stability in Existing Synchronous Generators
title_sort synthetic inertia from wind farms - impacts on rotor angle stability in existing synchronous generators
publisher Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for elkraftteknikk
publishDate 2014
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-26765
work_keys_str_mv AT overjordetamundstrømnes syntheticinertiafromwindfarmsimpactsonrotoranglestabilityinexistingsynchronousgenerators
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