Nonlinear Stability Investigation Of Type-4 Wind Turbines With Non-autonomous Behavior Based On Transient Damping Characteristics

  • Sujay Ghosh*
  • , Mohammad Kazem Bakhshizadeh
  • , Guangya Yang
  • , Lukasz Kocewiak
  • , Bikash Pal
  • , Mithulan Nadarajah
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

As wind and solar power penetration increases, more and more conventional power plants are being replaced; as a result, the nature of transient stability of the system evolves where the converter’s behaviour play dominating role during network events. This has necessitated a re-assessment of the nonlinear stability of the system. So far, the energy function-based transient stability method applied to synchronous machines has been applied to the converter-based system. However, there is ambiguity in terms of the damping quantification capturing the non-autonomous behaviour of the wind turbine systems, such as post-fault active current ramp rate control. This work aims to clarify the similarity between the synchronous machine model and a reduced large signal model of a wind turbine, and the difference in terms of the damping characteristics and how this impacts the system’s stability from a nonlinear perspective. A non-autonomous energy function is discussed that analytically proves that a wind turbine system with post-fault active ramp rate control is more stable compared to no ramp rate control. Finally, the stability boundary is constructed and validated using time-domain simulation studies.
Original languageEnglish
JournalIEEE Access
Volume11
Pages (from-to)76059-76070
Number of pages12
ISSN2169-3536
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Non-autonomous systems
  • Wind turbine converter system
  • PLL
  • Transient stability assessment
  • Energy function
  • Lyapunov direct method

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