Abstract

AbstractThe stable and efficient regulation of voltage and frequency is a critical issue associated with the functioning of modern power system network having renewable integration. This manuscript focuses on the concurrent regulation of voltage and frequency in a power network comprising multiple generating sources. Herein, along with conventional thermal and diesel plants, renewable generations from different sources have been considered such as wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) resources. Further, in a fresh attempt, the authors have modeled wind and solar PV generation using two different stochastic modeling methods concerning combined voltage and frequency loops in the regulated power system model. Furthermore, the novel Leader Harris Hawks Optimized Model Predictive Controller (MPC‐LHHO) has been applied to concurrently minimize the voltage and frequency deviations in the given power network. To address the intermittent nature of load and renewable generations, various auxiliary frequency controllers, such as the unified power flow controller (UPFC) and electric vehicle (EV) integration with the grid, have been implemented. The robustness of the proposed control method has been successfully validated through diverse scenarios of random loadings.

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