The development of cooperative control strategies for microgrids has become an area of increasing research interest in recent years, often a result of advances in other areas of control theory such as multi-agent systems and enabled by rapid advances in wireless communications technology and power electronics. Though the basic concept of cooperative action in microgrids is intuitively well-understood, a comprehensive survey of this approach with respect to its limitations and wide range of potential applications has not yet been provided. The objective of this paper is to provide a broad overview of cooperative control theory as applied to microgrids, introduce other possible applications not previously described, and discuss recent advances and open problems in this area of microgrid research.
This paper describes a combined current and voltage unbalance compensation scheme for static power converters on a multi-bus microgrid utilizing cooperative regulation on a sparse ad-hoc communication network. The proposed control scheme is both robust to changing network conditions and corrects for sub-optimal gain settings at each distributed generation unit. The scheme is based on local voltage and current measurements by each distributed generation unit on the network, and utilizes a primary and secondary control hierarchy. The scheme is then simulated using Matlab SimPowerSystem to demonstrate operation of the compensation scheme and evaluate its performance.
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