Abstract

As the actuators of distributed generators involved in Microgrids (MGs) may experience different faults, it is highly recommended to design an appropriate secondary Fault Tolerant (FT) controller to provide resilience and robustness with respect to these malicious events. Meanwhile, the reduction of communication network workload from controller-to-actuator may be helpful to mitigate actuators stress. By virtue of the above, this article aims at introducing a novel distributed adaptive FT-Event-Triggered Control (FT-ETC) scheme for secondary voltage regulation control in AC islanded MG able to compensate faulty actuators effects while reducing the waste of communication network resources. The proposed control scheme is derived with the aid of the backstepping method and the ETC theory, whose combination ensures resilience with respect to possible faulty signals, while no knowledge of global information is required. Adaptive mechanisms are derived by exploiting Lyapunov theory, while Zeno-freeness property is proven by contradiction. Compared with the existing state-of-the-art on FT-ETC in islanded MG, here the main novelty relies in achieving the asymptotic rather than the practical stability of the voltage tracking errors despite an unhealthy environment, while the remaining adaptive signals involved in the closed-loop systems are bounded in finite-time. Finally, an extensive simulation analysis, also involving real-time Hardware In-the-Loop (HIL) experiments, confirms the theoretical derivation.

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