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Optimal Location and Sizing of Renewable Distributed Generators for Improving Robust Voltage Stability Against Uncontrollable Reactive Compensation
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Metadata
Document Title
Optimal Location and Sizing of Renewable Distributed Generators for Improving Robust Voltage Stability Against Uncontrollable Reactive Compensation
Author
Kwangkaew A., Skolthanarat S., Charoenlarpnopparut C., Kaneko M.
Affiliations
Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, School of Information Science, Nomi, 923, Japan; Thammasat University, School of Information, Computer, Communication Technology (ICT), Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology (SIIT), Pathum Thani, 12120, Thailand; Nectec, National Science and Technology Development Agency, Pathum Thani, 12120, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
IEEE Access
ISSN
21693536
Year
2023
Volume
11
Page
52260-52274
Open Access
All Open Access, Gold
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
DOI
10.1109/ACCESS.2023.3279716
Format
Abstract
The penetration level of renewable energy sources is increasing worldwide with incentives and subsidies for declining greenhouse gas emissions. Nevertheless, determining the optimal location and size of renewable distributed generators (RDGs) remains a challenging task, owing to the uncontrollable reactance that dominates power distribution networks in voltage control and its sensitivity to weather conditions. Hence, without considering the reactive compensation of generators, RDG integration incurs undesired total power losses and puts the system at risk for voltage instability and collapse. This research proposes Load Disabling Nodal Analysis for Robust Voltage Stability (LDNA-RVS), a method that determines the optimal location and size of RDGs and aims to improve robust voltage stability by considering reactive compensation while enhancing the loss reduction efficiency (LRE) of the RDG integration. The proposed LDNA-RVS method has been successfully applied to the IEEE 33-bus and IEEE 69-bus test distribution systems, demonstrating its suitability for small-scale systems with a limited number of RDGs. Finally, LDNA-RVS outperforms other methods in six out of eight categories for robust voltage stability and achieves the top rank in all eight categories for LRE. These findings prove the effectiveness of LDNA-RVS in terms of robust voltage stability and LRE against the uncontrollable reactive compensation. ? 2013 IEEE.
License
CC BY-NC-ND
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS