Abstract

Development of microgrids and wide spread deployment of renewable generation and energy storage systems have highlighted the need for distributed control schemes to achieve maximum utilization and coordination among all the connected resources. In DC microgrids, the key goals of system-wide control are droop-based current sharing and network dc-voltage regulation. These may be achieved using a consensus algorithm secondary control that a) averages all the node voltages dynamically and maintains them at a nominal value and b) based on information from neighboring source currents to converge to a consensus in current sharing. Achieving the dynamic consensus may impose significant communication burden when implemented using conventional periodic communication methods. In this paper, an event-triggered communication based dynamic consensus algorithm is proposed that helps achieve both the stated goals of proportional current sharing along with average DC voltage regulation in a DC microgrid. The convergence and stability of the modified dynamic consensus algorithm and event triggering condition is proven using Lyapunov's stability criterion. The proposed control is applied to a DC microgrid system for secondary control of voltage and current regulation, and the performance of the proposed technique is validated under various operating conditions and disturbance in the communication system in both simulation and hardware environment.

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