Abstract

ABSTRACT Combined voltage and frequency control is a critical control problem of modern power system to avoid blackouts. This paper discusses the simultaneous voltage and frequency control for an interconnected multi-source multi-area power system having two areas of equal generating capacity, each containing thermal, diesel, and wind units. A centralized model predictive controller (MPC) scheme is suggested to minimize voltage and frequency fluctuations. For effective control, a normalized performance criterion has been considered, and recently appeared Harris hawks optimization (HHO) algorithm has been integrated for the optimal tuning of MPC weights for the first time. The effectiveness of the proposed MPC-HHO controller has been verified after comparing its transient response performance indices with that of various existing controllers available in the literature. Quantitatively, the proposed controller yields a minimum performance index value, i.e. 0.000741, and it has been observed that the proposed MPC-HHO controlled system has 79.28%, 68.89%, 77.19%, and 81.96% better settling time for frequency deviation in area 1 when compared with PIλDF-LSA, FOIDF-LSA, MFO-FOPID, and PID-FA controllers, respectively. Further, the stochasticity in wind power generation has been considered with the help of Monte Carlo simulation of Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average model (ARIMA) model for practical wind speed data from National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The stability of the proposed controller has been verified using eigenvalues and Bode plot analysis, where the MPC-HHO controlled system was having more gain and phase margin values as compared to the PID controlled system. Furthermore, the robustness of the approach has been successfully evaluated by considering the nonlinearities, and parameter sensitivity analysis has been conducted after varying the parameters of voltage and frequency control loops and reevaluating the transient performance of the controlled system. Besides this, a separate case study wherein the most recent concepts like Electric Vehicle (EV) integration with grid and Virtual Inertia (VI) have been applied in addition to the proposed controller to provide auxiliary control support in the system. It has been validated that EV-VI coordinated MPC-HHO controller provides quality transient response under different scenarios including reduced inertia and stochastic load variations.

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