Abstract

AbstractTo improve the power utilization efficiency of distributed energy units (DEUs) in DC microgrids, a centralized current iteration regulation approach is presented in this paper. The power utilization efficiency is partially represented by the power losses of DEUs, which can be modelled as quadratic functions of the output currents of DEUs. The power efficiency is also dependent on the line losses on the resistances between the DEUs and DC buses, which can be formulated in the basis of the output currents as well. Thus, the total power losses of DEUs comprise line and converter losses, which are verified to be a constrained‐convex function of the current allocation coefficients. In this paper, a primal‐dual subgradient method (PDSM) using only explicit addition and subtraction iterations is adopted to obtain the optimal current distribution coefficients. On this basis, an adaptive droop regulation scheme is applied to further control the output voltage references of DEUs, and proportional‐integral (PI) controllers are applied to track the adaptive voltages based on the current sharing errors. Both simulation and empirical results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed control to improve the power utilization efficiency of DEUs regardless parameter and load variations in DC microgrids.

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