Publication | Closed Access
Hybrid DC- and AC-Linked Microgrids: Towards Integration of Distributed Energy Resources
101
Citations
35
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
Distributed Energy SystemEngineeringDistributed Energy GenerationPower ElectronicsHybrid MicrogridDistributed Energy ResourcesPower SystemSystems EngineeringMicrogrid ParadigmDistributed GenerationHybrid Dc-Distributed EnergyPower SystemsElectrical EngineeringDc MicrogridsDistributed Control SystemElectric Grid IntegrationMicrogridsAc-linked MicrogridsSmart GridEnergy Management
Aggregated distributed energy resources in a microgrid appear as a single self‑regulated entity to higher‑level grids, making them indistinguishable from conventional customer sites. This study introduces a hybrid DC‑AC microgrid paradigm to integrate heterogeneous small‑scale distributed energy resources and examines key behavioral and technical requirements of power‑electronics interfaces, developing a decoupled control framework. The approach relies on advanced power‑electronics interfaces that control DC and AC links among distributed units, employing a decoupled control framework to maintain system flexibility. Evaluation of the decoupled control framework in the hybrid microgrid demonstrates effective performance, validating the proposed integration strategy.
This paper presents a microgrid paradigm with both DC and AC links, which may provide an effective way to integrate a heterogeneous set of small-size distributed energy resources into the existing electric power infrastructure. The collection of aggregated energy resource units at each level represents those distributed resources to the upper level as a single self-regulated entity (as a DC or AC, generator or load). At the top level, the collection of all distributed energy resources in the microgrid appears to the utility grid as indistinguishable from many other currently legitimate customer sites. Maintaining this profile relies on the flexibility of advanced power electronics that control the interfaces among distributed energy units, DC links, AC links, and the surrounding power system. This paper also discusses some major issues pertinent to behavioral functions and technical requirements of the power electronics interfaces and controls. A decoupled control framework is developed for the hybrid microgrid and the performances are evaluated.
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