Jorge Cortés
Professor
Cymer Corporation Endowed Chair
Distributed transient frequency control for power networks with stability and performance guarantees
Y. Zhang, J. Cortés
Automatica 105 (2019), 274-285
Abstract
This paper proposes a distributed strategy regulated on a subset
of individual buses in a power network described by the swing
equations to achieve transient frequency control while preserving
asymptotic stability. Transient frequency control refers to the
ability to maintain the transient frequency of each bus of
interest in a given safe region, provided it is initially in it,
and ii) if it is initially not, then drive the frequency to
converge to this region within a finite time, with a guaranteed
convergence rate. Building on Lyapunov stability and set
invariance theory, we formulate the stability and the transient
frequency requirements as two separate constraints for the control
input. Our design synthesizes a controller that satisfies both
constraints simultaneously. The controller is distributed and
Lipschitz, guaranteeing the existence and uniqueness of the
trajectories of the closed-loop system. We further bound its
magnitude and demonstrate its robustness against measurement
inaccuracies. Simulations on the IEEE 39-bus power network
illustrate our results.
pdf
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
University of California, San Diego
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cortes at ucsd.edu
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