A High Reliability Event Triggered Secondary Control Strategy for Microgrid Considering Time Varying

A High Reliability Event Triggered Secondary Control Strategy for Microgrid Considering Time Varying

Abstract:

A decentralized hierarchical control strategy with communication time-varying delay is designed for microgrid (MG) to enhance the voltage and frequency regulation. Recently, event-triggered consensus algorithm is used to reduce energy consumption. To improve the communication reliability, data loss due to communication interruption is considered in this article. First, each distributed generator (DG) of MG is regarded as an agent. Based on multiagent consistency theory, the distributed secondary controller is established. Second, the event trigger function of the secondary controller is constructed, and the stability of the secondary controller is proved by Lyapunov theorem. Third, a data predictive controller is established to train and learn the historical voltage, frequency, and active power of MG by using the improved extreme learning machine (ELM) algorithm. When communication is interrupted, the ELM controller is triggered and the lost data is compensated in time. Finally, the effectiveness of the control strategy is verified by simulation. Simulation results show that the proposed control strategy effectively adjusts the frequency and voltage, realizes accurate active power sharing, reduces the communication burden, and improves the reliability of MG.