Abstract
Providing frequency response, especially fast frequency response such as Red D in the Pennsylvania-New Jersey-Maryland Interconnection (PJM) market, is challenging for many generation plants to deliver on their own. If they have adequate flexibility, hydropower plants are typically able to provide slower regulation support (e.g., Reg A in PJM), but do not respond fast enough to provide Reg D. The ability to provide Reg D would improve their revenue because this service is typically more valuable. This work presents a control approach to use hydropower, battery, and ultracapacitor systems to provide fast regulation in a way that uses the response contribution of each asset. In particular, the proposed control architecture applies a variational mode decomposition (VMD) technique on the incoming Reg D signal to extract multiple dynamic-regulation components with non-overlapping frequencies. With the response-speed dependent alignment, these regulation components are fed to the hydrogenator and hybrid energy storage system (HESS). The paper evaluates the proposed approach on a direct-current (DC)-coupled active system by computing several performance measures and analyzing sensitivity based on HESS component proportional capacities. The results reveal that the proposed VMD-based signal conditioning performs well and that optimizing the sizing of the battery and ultracapactor components further enhances performance.
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CITATION STYLE
Singh, V. K., Banerjee, A., Shafiul Alam, S. M., & Mosier, T. M. (2022). Dynamic Frequency Regulation Improvement in Hydropower-Hybrid System using Variational Mode Decomposition. In Proceedings of the IEEE Power Engineering Society Transmission and Distribution Conference (Vol. 2022-April). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. https://doi.org/10.1109/TD43745.2022.9816862
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