System-Theoretic Performance Metrics for Low-Inertia Stability of Power Networks

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Publication:6284033

arXiv1703.02646MaRDI QIDQ6284033FDOQ6284033


Authors: Mohammad Pirani, John W. Simpson-Porco, Barış Fidan Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 7 March 2017

Abstract: As bulk synchronous generators in the power grid are replaced by distributed generation interfaced through power electronics, inertia is removed from the system, prompting concerns over grid stability. Different metrics are available for quantifying grid stability and performance; however, no theoretical results are available comparing and contrasting these metrics. This paper presents a rigorous system-theoretic study of performance metrics for low-inertia stability. For networks with uniform parameters, we derive explicit expressions for the eigenvalue damping ratios, and for the mathcalH2 and mathcalHinfty norms of the linearized swing dynamics, from external power disturbances to different phase/frequency performance outputs.These expressions show the dependence of system performance on inertia constants, damping constants, and on the grid topology. Surprisingly, we find that the mathcalH2 and mathcalHinfty norms can display contradictory behavior as functions of the system inertia, indicating that low-inertia performance depends strongly on the chosen performance metric.













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