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A Generalized PSS Architecture for Balancing Transient and Small-Signal Response

For decades, power system stabilizers paired with high initial response automatic voltage regulators have served as an effective means of meeting sometimes conflicting system stability requirements. Driven primarily by increases in power electronically-coupled generation and load, the dynamics of la...

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Published in:IEEE transactions on power systems 2020-03, Vol.35 (2), p.1446-1456
Main Authors: Elliott, Ryan T., Arabshahi, Payman, Kirschen, Daniel S.
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Arabshahi, Payman
Kirschen, Daniel S.
description For decades, power system stabilizers paired with high initial response automatic voltage regulators have served as an effective means of meeting sometimes conflicting system stability requirements. Driven primarily by increases in power electronically-coupled generation and load, the dynamics of large-scale power systems are rapidly changing. Electric grids are losing inertia and traditional sources of voltage support and oscillation damping. The system load is becoming stiffer with respect to changes in voltage. In parallel, advancements in wide-area measurement technology have made it possible to implement control strategies that act on information transmitted over long distances in nearly real time. In this paper, we present a power system stabilizer architecture that can be viewed as a generalization of the standard Δω-type stabilizer. The control strategy utilizes a real-time estimate of the center-of-inertia speed derived from wide-area measurements. This approach creates a flexible set of trade-offs between transient and small-signal response, making synchronous generators better able to adapt to changes in system dynamics. The phenomena of interest are examined using a two-area test case and a reduced-order model of the North American Western Interconnection. To validate the key findings under realistic conditions, we employ a state-of-the-art co-simulation platform to combine high-fidelity power system and communication network models. The benefits of the proposed control strategy are retained even under pessimistic assumptions of communication network performance.
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subjects Architecture
Automatic voltage regulator
co-simulation
Communications networks
Communications systems
Computer simulation
Damping
Electric power systems
Electrical loads
Inertia
linear time-varying systems
phasor measurement unit
Power system stability
power system stabilizer
Real time
real-time control
Real-time systems
Reduced order models
System dynamics
Systems stability
Transient analysis
Voltage regulators
Wide area measurements
wide-area measurement systems
title A Generalized PSS Architecture for Balancing Transient and Small-Signal Response
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