Abstract

The information exchange among distributed energy resources (DERs) in microgrids (MGs) is through sensing and communication systems, which are prone to expose cyber-attack threats. This article investigates the stability issue of MG systems with distributed secondary control under latency attacks and random denial-of-service (DoS) attacks. Considering these two kinds of attack modes, the corresponding attack consequences including network jamming and time-varying latency in the communication network are simultaneously studied. First, a new metric is defined to quantify the DoS attacks by considering different network jamming choices. Then, the time-domain stability study is conducted considering both attack consequences. Next, a cyber-resilient control strategy is proposed with two control modes: 1) An adaptive-gain resilient controller to sustain the fast stabilization of MG systems under nonuniform time-varying latency attacks, which is proved by the stochastic stability analysis using Lyapunov–Krasovskii functional method. 2) An event-trigger topology reconfiguration controller against excessive latency and damaged cyber connectivity caused by DoS attacks. A switching mechanism for coordinating the above control modes is also designed to guarantee the secondary control functions of MG systems. A modified IEEE 13-bus MG system with five DERs is tested and the effectiveness of the proposed controller under different attack scenarios is verified by OPAL-RT real-time tests.

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