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Islanding

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
When distributed generation continues after electrical grid is down

Islanding is the intentional or unintentional division of aninterconnected power grid into individual disconnected regions with their ownpower generation.

Intentional islanding is often performed as adefence in depth to mitigate acascading blackout. If one island collapses, it will not take neighboring islands with it. For example,nuclear power plants havesafety-critical cooling systems that are typically powered from the general grid. The coolant loops typically lie on a separate circuit that can also operate off reactor power or emergencydiesel generators if the grid collapses.[1][2]

Grid designs that lend themselves to islandingnear the customer level are commonly referred to asmicrogrids. In apower outage, the microgrid controller disconnects the local circuit from the grid on a dedicated switch and forces any onlinedistributed generators to power the local load.[3][4]

Unintentional islanding is a dangerous condition that may induce severe stress on the generator, as the generator must match any changes inelectrical load alone. If not properly communicated topower line workers, an unintentional island can also present a risk ofelectrical shock. Unlike unpowered wires, islands require special techniques to reconnect to the larger grid, because thealternating current they carry is notin phase. For these reasons,solar inverters that are designed to supply power to the grid are generally required to have some sort of automatic anti-islanding circuitry, whichshorts out the panels rather than continuing to power the unintentional island.

Methods that detect islands without a large number of false positives constitute the subject of considerable research. Each method has some threshold that needs to be crossed before a condition is considered to be a signal of grid interruption, which leads to a "non-detection zone" (NDZ), the range of conditions where a real grid failure will be filtered out.[5] For this reason, before field deployment, grid-interactive inverters are typically tested by reproducing at their output terminals specific grid conditions and evaluating the effectiveness of the anti-islanding methods in detecting island conditions.[4][6]

Intentional islanding

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Intentional islanding divides an electrical network into fragments with adequatepower generation in each fragment to supply that fragment's loads.[7][8] In practice, balancing generation and load in each fragment is difficult, and often the formation of islands requires temporarilyshedding load.[9][10] Synchronous generators may not deliver sufficientreactive power to prevent severetransients during fault-induced island formation,[11] and any inverters must switch fromconstant-current toconstant-voltage control.[12] Intentional islanding can be used after a blackout and during theblack start process to restore power to isolated parts of the grid.[13]

AssumingP≠NP, no goodcut set criterion exists to implement islanding.Polynomial-time approximations exist, but finding the exactly optimal divisions can becomputationally infeasible.[8][9]

However, islanding localizes any failures to the containing island, preventing failures from spreading.[14] In general,blackout statistics follow apower law, such that fragmenting a network increases the probability of blackouts, but reduces thetotal amount of unsatisfied electricity demand.[15]

Islanding reduces theeconomic efficiency of the wholesalepower market,[10] and is typically a last resort applied when the grid is known to be unstable but has not yet collapsed.[8] In particular, islanding improves resilience to threats with known time but not location, such asterrorist attacks,military strikes on electrical infrastructure, orextreme weather events.[16]

Home islanding

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Following the2019 California power shutoffs, there was a rise in interest in the possibility of operating a house's electrical grid as an island. While typicaldistributed generation systems are too small to power all appliances in a home simultaneously, it is possible for them to manage critical household power needs through traditionalload-frequency control. Modules installed inseries between the generator and large loads, likeair conditioners andelectric ovens, measure the island power frequency and perform automaticload shedding as the inverter nearsoverload.[citation needed]

Detection methods

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Automatically detecting an island is the subject of considerable research. These can be performed passively, looking for transient events on the grid; or actively, by creating small instances of those transient events that will be negligible on a large grid but detectable on a small one. Active methods may be performed by local generators or "upstream" at the utility level.[17]

Many passive methods rely on the inherent stress of operating an island. Each device in the island comprises a much larger proportion of the total load, such that the voltage and frequency changes as devices are added or removed are likely to be much larger than in normal grid conditions. However, the difference is not so large as to preventidentification errors, and voltage and frequency shifts are generally used along with other signals.[18]

The active analogue of voltage and frequency shift detection attempts to measure the overallimpedance fed by the inverter. When the circuit is grid-connected, there is almost no voltage response to slight variations in inverter current; but an island will observe a change in voltage. In principle, this technique has a vanishingly small NDZ, but in practice the grid is not always an infinitely-stiffvoltage source, especially if multiple inverters attempt to measure impedance simultaneously.[19][20]

Unlike the shifts, a random circuit is highly unlikely to have acharacteristic frequency matching standard grid power. However, many devices, like televisions, deliberately synchronize to the grid frequency. Motors, in particular, may be able to stabilize circuit frequency close to the grid standard as they "wind down".[21]

At the utility level, protective relays designed to isolate a portion of the grid can also switch inhigh impedance components, such that an islanded distributed generator will necessarilyoverload and shut down. This practice, however, relies on the expensive widespread provision of high-impedance devices.[22][23]

Alternatively, anti-islanding circuitry can rely onout-of-band signals. For example, utilities can send a shut-down signal throughpower line carrier communications or atelephony hookup.[24][25]

Inverter-specific techniques

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Certain passive methods are uniquely viable withdirect current generators (inverter-based resources), such assolar panels.

For example, inverters typically generate aphase shift when islanding.Inverters generally match the grid signal with aphase locked loop (PLL) thattracks zero-crossings. Between those events, the inverter produces asinusoidal output, varying the current to produce the proper voltage waveform given the previous cycle's load. When the main grid disconnects, thepower factor on the island suddenly decreases, and inverter's current no longer produces the proper waveform. By the time the waveform is completed and returns to zero, the signal will be out of phase. However, many common events, like motors starting, also cause phase jumps as new impedances are added to the circuit.[26]

A more effective technique inverts the islanding phase shift: the inverter is designed to produce output slightly mis-aligned with the grid, with the expectation that the grid will overwhelm the signal. Thephase-locked loop then becomes unstable when the grid signal is missing; the system drifts away from the design frequency; and the inverter shuts down.[27]

A very secure islanding detection method searches for distinctive2nd and 3rd harmonics generated bynonlinear interactions inside the invertertransformers. There are generally no othertotal harmonic distortion (THD) sources that match an inverter. Even noisy sources, like motors, do not effect measurable distortion on a grid-connected circuit, as the latter has essentially infinite filtration capacity.Switched-mode inverters generally have large distortions — as much as 5%. When the grid disconnects, the local circuit then exhibits inverter-induced distortion.[28] Modern inverters attempt to minimize harmonic distortion, in some cases to unmeasurable limits, but in principle it is straightforward to design one which introduces a controlled amount of distortion to actively search for island formation.[29]

Distributed generation controversy

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Utilities have refused to allow installation ofhome solar or other distributed generation systems, on the grounds that they may create uncontrolled grid islands.[30][31] In Ontario, a 2009 modification to thefeed-in tariff induced many rural customers to establish small (10 kW) systems under the "capacity exempt" microFIT. However,Hydro One then refused to connect the systems to the grid after construction.[32]

The issue can be hotly political, in part because distributed generation proponents believe the islanding concern is largelypretextual. A 1999 test in the Netherlands was unable to find distributed-generation islands 60 seconds after grid collapse. Moreover, moments when distributed generation only matched distributed loads occurred at a ratecomparable to 10−6 yr−1, and that the chance that the grid would disconnect at that point in time was even less, so that the "probability of encountering an islanding [sic] is virtually zero".[33]

Unintentional islanding risk is primarily the case ofsynchronous generators, as inmicrohydro. A 2004 Canadian report concluded that "Anti-islanding technology for inverter based DG systems is much better developed, and published risk assessments suggest that the current technology and standards provide adequate protection."[34]

Utilities generally argue that the distributed generators might effect the following problems:[35][36]

Safety concerns
If an island forms, repair crews may be faced with unexpected live wires.
End-user damage
Distributed generators may not be able to maintain gridfrequencies orvoltages close to standard, and nonstandard currents can damage customer equipment. Depending on the circuit configuration, the utility may be liable for the damage.
Controlled grid reconnection
Reclosing distribution circuits onto an active island may damage equipment or be inhibited byout-of-phase protection relays. Procedures to prevent these outcomes may delay restoration of electric service to dropped customers.

The first two claims are disputed within thepower industry. For example, normal linework constantly risks exposure tolive wires, andstandard procedures require explicit checks to ensure that a wire is dead before worker contact.Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems can be set toalarm if there is unexpected voltage on a purportedly-isolated line. A UK-based study concluded that "The risk of electric shock associated with islanding of PV systems under worst-case PV penetration scenarios to both network operators and customers is typically <10−9 per year."[37][38] Likewise, damage to end-user devices is largely inhibited by modern island-detection systems.[citation needed]

It is, generally, the last problem that most concerns utilities.Reclosers are commonly used to divide up the grid into smaller sections that will automatically, and quickly, re-energize the branch as soon as the fault condition (a tree branch on lines for instance) clears. There is some concern that the reclosers may not re-energize in the case of an island or that an intervening loss of synchrony might damage distributed generators on the island. However, it is neither clear that reclosers are still useful in modern utility practice nor that breaker-reclosers must act on allphases.[39]

References

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  1. ^Autorité de sûreté nucléaire."Îlotage provoqué des deux réacteurs à la centrale nucléaire de Saint-Alban".ASN (in French). Retrieved2019-02-25.
  2. ^"Centrale nucléaire de Fessenheim: Mise à l'arrêt de l'unité de production n°2".EDF France (in French). 2018-07-14. Archived fromthe original on 2019-02-26. Retrieved2019-02-25.
  3. ^Saleh, M.; Esa, Y.; Mhandi, Y.; Brandauer, W.; Mohamed, A. (October 2016)."Design and implementation of CCNY DC microgrid testbed".2016 IEEE Industry Applications Society Annual Meeting. pp. 1–7.doi:10.1109/IAS.2016.7731870.ISBN 978-1-4799-8397-1.S2CID 16464909.
  4. ^ab"IEEE 1547.4 - 2011".IEEE Standards Association Working Group Site & Liaison Index. IEEE. Retrieved3 March 2017.
  5. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 10.
  6. ^Caldognetto, T.; Dalla Santa, L.; Magnone, P.; Mattavelli, P. (2017). "Power Electronics Based Active Load for Unintentional Islanding Testbenches".IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications.53 (4):3831–3839.Bibcode:2017IOJIA..53.3831C.doi:10.1109/TIA.2017.2694384.S2CID 40097383.
  7. ^Mureddu, Mario; Caldarelli, Guido; Damiano, Alfonso; Scala, Antonio; Meyer-Ortmanns, Hildegard (2016-10-07)."Islanding the power grid on the transmission level: less connections for more security".Scientific Reports.6 (1) 34797.Bibcode:2016NatSR...634797M.doi:10.1038/srep34797.ISSN 2045-2322.PMC 5054509.PMID 27713509.
  8. ^abcQuirós-Tortós, Jairo; Sánchez-García, Rubén; Brodzki, Jacek; Bialek, Janusz; Terzija, Vladimir (2015)."Constrained spectral clustering-based methodology for intentional controlled islanding of large-scale power systems".IET Generation, Transmission & Distribution.9 (1):31–42.doi:10.1049/iet-gtd.2014.0228.ISSN 1751-8695.
  9. ^abPahwa, S.; Youssef, M.; Schumm, P.; Scoglio, C.; Schulz, N. (2013)."Optimal intentional islanding to enhance the robustness of power grid networks".Physica A.392 (17). Elsevier:3741–3754.Bibcode:2013PhyA..392.3741P.doi:10.1016/j.physa.2013.03.029.hdl:2097/16520 – viaKansas State repository.
  10. ^abYang, Bo; Vittal, Vijay; Heydt, Gerald T. (30 Oct 2006). "Slow coherency based controlled islanding".IEEE Transactions on Power Systems.21 (4):1840–1847.doi:10.1109/TPWRS.2006.881126.
  11. ^Katiraei, F.; Iravani, M. R.; Lehn, P. W. (Jan 2005) [31 May 2005]."Micro-grid autonomous operation during and subsequent to islanding process"(PDF).IEEE Transactions on Power Delivery.20 (1):248–257.Bibcode:2005ITPD...20..248K.doi:10.1109/TPWRD.2004.835051. TPWRD-00103-2003.
  12. ^Balaguer, Irvin J.; Qin Lei; Yang, Shuitao; Supatti, Uthane; Peng, Fang Zheng (Jan 2011) [10 Dec 2010]. "Control for grid-connected and intentional islanding operations of distributed power generation".IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics.58 (1):147–157.Bibcode:2011ITIE...58..147B.doi:10.1109/TIE.2010.2049709 – viaAcademia.edu.
  13. ^Redmann, Florian; Ernst, Alexander; Orlik, Bernd (May 2021)."Black Start Capability and Islanded Operation of Power Converters with Virtual Synchronous Generator Control".PCIM Europe Digital Days 2021; International Exhibition and Conference for Power Electronics, Intelligent Motion, Renewable Energy and Energy Management:1–8.
  14. ^Li, Juan; Liu, Chen-Ching; Schneider, Kevin P. (Dec 2010). "Controlled partitioning of a power network considering real and reactive power balance".IEEE Transactions on Smart Grid.1 (3):261–269.Bibcode:2010ITSG....1..261L.doi:10.1109/TSG.2010.2082577.
  15. ^Scala, Antonio; Lucentini, Pier Giorgio De Santis; Caldarelli, Guido; D'Agostino, Gregorio (1 June 2016) [13 Oct 2018]. "Cascades in interdependent flow networks".Physica D.323. Elsevier:35–39.arXiv:1512.03088.Bibcode:2016PhyD..323...35S.doi:10.1016/j.physd.2015.10.010.
  16. ^Biswas, Shuchismita; Bernabeu, Emanuel; Picarelli, David.Proactive islanding of the power grid to mitigate high-impact low-frequency events. 2020 IEEE Power & Energy Society Innovative Smart Grid Technologies Conference (ISGT).arXiv:1911.04440.doi:10.1109/ISGT45199.2020.9087788.
  17. ^Bower & Ropp 2002.
  18. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, pp. 17–19.
  19. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 24.
  20. ^"Negative-Sequence Current Injection for Fast Islanding Detection of a Distributed Resource Unit", Houshang Karimi, Amirnaser Yazdani, and Reza Iravani, IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS, VOL. 23, NO. 1, JANUARY 2008.
  21. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 20.
  22. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, pp. 12–13.
  23. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, pp. 37–38.
  24. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 40.
  25. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, pp. 13–14.
  26. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, pp. 20–21.
  27. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, pp. 28–29, 34.
  28. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 22.
  29. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 26.
  30. ^"Technical Interconnection Requirements for Distributed Generation"Archived 2014-02-07 at theWayback Machine, Hydro One, 2010
  31. ^"California Electric Rule 21 Supplemental Review Guideline"Archived 2010-10-19 at theWayback Machine
  32. ^Jonathan Sher,"Ontario Hydro pulls plug on solar plans",The London Free Press (via QMI), 14 February 2011
  33. ^Verhoeven, pg. 46
  34. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, p. 45.
  35. ^Bower & Ropp 2002, p. 13.
  36. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, p. 3.
  37. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, pp. 9–10.
  38. ^Risk analysis of islanding of photovoltaic power systems within low voltage distribution networks. 2002.CiteSeerX 10.1.1.114.2752.
  39. ^Xu, Mauch & Martel 2004, p. 48.

Bibliography

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Standards

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  • IEEE 1547 Standards, IEEE Standard for Interconnecting Distributed Resources with Electric Power Systems
  • UL 1741 Table of Contents, UL 1741: Standard for Inverters, Converters, Controllers and Interconnection System Equipment for Use With Distributed Energy Resources

Further reading

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External links

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