Abstract
A microgrid (MG) is a smart grid cyber-physical system, with component coordination relying on cyber resilience. Weak communications, protocols, and tools make the MG's secondary frequency control vulnerable to various cyber-attacks, posing new challenges and stability risks. In response to this challenge, this paper introduces the enhanced robust H∞ technique considering the dynamic impacts of cyber-attacks on secondary frequency control to develop a secondary frequency control loop, improving the regulation performance and cyber resiliency of the MG frequency. The secondary control cyber-attack strategies mainly rely on false data injection (FDI), denial of service (DoS), and controller hijacking. These attack techniques are simultaneously considered in formulating the H∞ problem and control synthesis as unstructured parametric uncertainty, attenuating the concurrent cyber impacts. The study extends a load frequency control model to illustrate how cyber-attacks can be represented mathematically and physically in the MG. The results reveal that cyber-attacks affect secondary frequency control elements differently depending on the type of cyber threats used. By implementing an enhanced H∞ controller, the MG can effectively maintain stable frequency levels even when faced with malicious attacks and disruptions caused by renewable energy sources and loads.
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