In a conventional AC distribution system, the conservation voltage reduction (CVR) strategy is widely employed to lower down the voltage of specific load to lower the power consumption. The wide applicability of demand side management (DSM) using CVR in a stand-alone microgrid through VSI-based energy sources is a thrust area, that is, not examined yet and needs to be explored. The fast dynamics and flexible control are the characteristics of the voltage-current droop method which further increases the inertia of the voltage source inverter. For utilizing these advantages of this droop method, it is required to determine the accurate droop gain to properly coordinate the distribution of power among DGs. In this paper, the voltage-current droop method is utilized to carry out the function of DSM, and a modified droop computation method for voltage-current droop is formulated to determine the impedance from initial of the DG point to the downstream end for multifeeder network. As most of the droop control techniques emulate the conventional power grid such as Q-V droop control which reduces voltage with the increase of reactive power, the research prospect is very high in devising the new droop computation method for voltage-current droop for accurate control of power. In addition to it, the work is extended to apply the benefits of voltage-current droop to execute DSM strategy in standalone MG. Moreover, the capability of the proposed estimation of droop parameter is implemented on a standalone 5-bus single-feeder multi-DGs network, and furthermore, the scheme is applied to IEEE-9 bus multifeeder multi-DGs network to show the applicability of the proposed scheme. The simulation results produced from MATLAB/Simulink are compared with the decentralized power-based droop method and conventional voltage-current droop technique to analyse the performance of the devised scheme.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.