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Journal article

Comparison between Synthetic Inertia and Fast Frequency Containment Control Based on Single Phase EVs in a Microgrid

In Applied Energy — 2017, Volume 210, pp. 764-775
From

Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark2

Energy System Management, Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark3

Distributed Energy Resources, Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark4

The increasing share of distributed and inertia-less resources entails an upsurge in balancing and system stabilisation services. In particular, the displacement of conventional generation reduces the available rotational inertia in the power system, leading to high interest in synthetic inertia solutions.

The objective of this paper is twofold: first, it aims to implement and validate fast frequency control and synthetic (virtual) inertia control, employing single phase electric vehicles as flexibility resources. Second, it proposes a trade-off analysis between the two controllers. The interdependency between frequency containment and synthetic inertia control on the transient frequency variation is shown analytically.

The capabilities and limits of series produced EVs in providing such services are investigated, first on a simulation based approach and subsequently by using real hardware. The results show that fast frequency control can improve the transient frequency behaviour. However, both on the simulation and on the experimental level, the implementation of synthetic inertia control is more challenging.

In fact, due its derivative nature and the system dynamics, its performance is limited. Furthermore, the crucial importance of the EVs’ response time for both controllers is highlighted

Language: English
Year: 2017
Pages: 764-775
ISSN: 03062619 and 18729118
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2017.06.051
ORCIDs: Marinelli, Mattia , Rezkalla, Michel M.N. , Zecchino, Antonio , Martinenas, Sergejus and Prostejovsky, Alexander

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