Investigation of Constrained Vsc-hvdc Tie Lines for Transient Stability Improvement of Interconnected Power Systems
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Date
2023Author
Mwangudza, Mwasaha N
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Voltage Source Converter (VSC) – High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) tie lines have become
popular for the interconnection of power systems owing to their ability to independently control
active and reactive powers. This attribute has been harnessed for transient stability improvement
through the control of active or reactive powers. The supporting control area in interconnected
power systems through the VSC-HVDC tie lines can modulate the DC power to support a faulted
control area to recover stable conditions. However, it has been traditionally assumed that the
supporting control area is an infinite system able to support the faulted control area without
compromising its stable operating conditions. On the contrary, power systems have operational
limits which must be respected. Violation of stable conditions compromises the system's integrity
and at worst can cause a total system collapse. Providing the required regulating power beyond the
ability of the supporting control area should be prevented to avoid unstable conditions. It is on this
gap that this thesis has studied and simulated two cases of a Kundur two-area power system
interconnected through a VSC-HVDC tie line. The first case has the traditional unconstrained
VSC-HVDC tie line assuming an infinite system for the supporting control area. The second case
has a constrained VSC-HVDC tie line that monitors the amount of the required regulating power
and compares it with the system strength of the supporting area to avoid violating its stable
conditions. The transient stability response of the two cases of a Kundur two-area system
connected through a VSC-HVDC tie line was simulated in MATLAB/SIMULINK software.
Transient faults were performed on the two systems and their transient responses were plotted
under different fault scenarios. The first fault scenario resulted in the required regulating power
within the ability of the supporting control area and the second fault scenario resulted in the
required regulating power above the ability of the supporting control area. The simulation results
showed that the unconstrained VSC-HVDC system exhibits unstable conditions with its frequency
response and rotor speed deviation deteriorating significantly without recovering stable conditions.
With the incorporation of the Inter-Area Frequency Supplementary Controller (IAFSC), the
modulated link power is reset to assist in recovering stable conditions once the stability threshold
limit is violated. The IAFSC monitors the frequency of the control areas in real-time to mitigate
violation of stable conditions. It is armed with a modulation release signal logic dependent on the
iv
frequency operating condition of the supporting control area. When the stability threshold limit is
violated, the controller blocks the power ramp-up and resets the power modulation to the initial
power order. In severe fault conditions, the IAFSC controller achieved transient stability
improvement in the supporting control area thus mitigating unstable conditions that could
jeopardize its stability
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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