Abstract

This study investigates the application of the model predictive control technique for voltage stability of an isolated hybrid wind–diesel power system based on reactive power control. The proposed generation system mainly consists of a synchronous generator for a diesel-generator system and an induction generator for a wind energy conversion system. A static VAR compensator is used to stabilize load voltage through compensating reactive power. Two control paths are used to stabilize load bus voltage based on model predictive control. The first control path is used to adjust the total reactive power of the system by controlling the static VAR compensator firing angle. The second is proposed to control the excitation voltage of the synchronous generator. Model predictive control is used to determine t optimal control actions, including system constraints. To mitigate calculation effort and reduce numerical problems, especially in a large prediction horizon, an exponentially weighted functional model predictive control (F-model predictive control) is applied. The proposed controller was tested through step change in load reactive power plus step increase in input wind power. The performance of the proposed system with the proposed controller was compared with classical model predictive control; moreover, this scheme is tested against parameter variations.

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