2021 journal article

Modeling and Quantifying the Impact of Wind Penetration on Slow Coherency of Power Systems

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER SYSTEMS, 36(2), 1002–1012.

co-author countries: United States of America πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
author keywords: Power system dynamics; Power system stability; Wind farms; Laplace equations; Doubly fed induction generators; Wind power generation; Doubly-fed induction generators; eigen-vectors; singular perturbation; slow coherency; wind power system
Source: Web Of Science
Added: March 29, 2021

This paper presents a mathematical analysis of how wind generation impacts the coherency property of power systems. Coherency arises from time-scale separation in the dynamics of synchronous generators, where generator states inside a coherent area synchronize over a fast time-scale due to stronger coupling, while the areas themselves synchronize over a slower time-scale due to weaker coupling. This time-scale separation is reflected in the form of a spectral separation in the weighted Laplacian matrix describing the swing dynamics of the generators. However, when wind farms with doubly-fed induction generators (DFIG) are integrated in the system then this Laplacian matrix changes based on both the level of wind penetration and the location of the wind farms. The modified Laplacian changes the effective slow eigenspace of the generators. Depending on penetration level, this change may result in changing the identities of the coherent areas. We develop a theoretical framework to quantify this modification, and validate our results with numerical simulations of the IEEE 68-bus system with one and multiple wind farms. We compare our model based results on clustering with results using measurement-based principal component analysis to substantiate our derivations.