Abstract
The integration of commercial onshore large-scale wind farms into a national grid comes with several technical issues that predominately ensure power quality in accordance with respective grid codes. The resulting impacts are complemented with the absorption of larger amounts of reactive power by wind generators. In addition, seasonal variations and inter-farm wake effects further deteriorate the overall system performance and restrict the optimal use of available wind resources. This paper presented an assessment framework to address the power quality issues that have arisen after integrating large-scale wind farms into weak transmission grids, especially considering inter-farm wake effect, seasonal variations, reactive power depletion, and compensation with a variety of voltage-ampere reactive (Var) devices. Herein, we also proposed a recovery of significant active power deficits caused by the wake effect via increasing hub height of wind turbines. For large-scale wind energy penetration, a real case study was considered for three wind farms with a cumulative capacity of 154.4 MW integrated at a Nooriabad Grid in Pakistan to analyze their overall impacts. An actual test system was modeled in MATLAB Simulink for a composite analysis. Simulations were performed for various scenarios to consider wind intermittency, seasonal variations across four seasons, and wake effect. The capacitor banks and various flexible alternating current transmission systems (FACTS) devices were employed for a comparative analysis with and without considering the inter-farm wake effect. The power system parameters along with active and reactive power deficits were considered for comprehensive analysis. Unified power flow controller (UPFC) was found to be the best compensation device through comparative analysis, as it maintained voltage at nearly 1.002 pu, suppressed frequency transient in a range of 49.88–50.17 Hz, and avoided any resonance while maintaining power factors in an allowable range. Moreover, it also enhanced the power handling capability of the power system. The 20 m increase in hub height assisted the recovery of the active power deficit to 48%, which thus minimized the influence of the wake effect.
Highlights
The world is shifting away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy resources (RERs) due to advantages like availability, abundance in nature, and environment friendliness [1]
This paper aimed to investigate and analyze the technical impacts of an large scale-wind farms (LSWF) comprised of three-wind farms that penetrated the transmission level considering the inter-farm wake effect, wind intermittency via seasonal variation, power quality (PQ) via grid codes, and Q compensation with various flexible alternating current transmission systems (FACTS)
This study offered a technical guideline for FACTS devices to address wake effects, wind intermittency, PQ, and Q compensation issues
Summary
The world is shifting away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy resources (RERs) due to advantages like availability, abundance in nature, and environment friendliness [1]. The wind sector has seen a phenomenal growth due to manufacturing, technological advancements, economic feasibility, and easy accessibility, with which the cumulative installed capacity is expected to be around 1900 MW by the end of 2020 [2]. Onshore wind farms constitute 95% of the overall installations due to technology advancements, large-scale manufacturing, widespread installation, and reasonable maintenance expenses. Wind power expansion is a result of viable RERs that can realize sustainable development and combat the impact of climate change. The integration of large scale-wind farms (LSWF) into national transmission grids of various countries are subjected to several issues, as reported in the literature, such as technical, economic, environmental, etc. This paper focuses primarily on the technical issues The integration of large scale-wind farms (LSWF) into national transmission grids of various countries are subjected to several issues, as reported in the literature, such as technical, economic, environmental, etc. [2,3].
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.