English

Lyapunov Stability of Smart Inverters Using Linearized DistFlow Approximation

Systems and Control 2020-11-20 v1 Systems and Control

Abstract

Fast-acting smart inverters that utilize preset operating conditions to determine real and reactive power injection/consumption can create voltage instabilities (over-voltage, voltage oscillations and more) in an electrical distribution network if set-points are not properly configured. In this work, linear distribution power flow equations and droop-based Volt-Var and Volt-Watt control curves are used to analytically derive a stability criterion using \lyapnouv analysis that includes the network operating condition. The methodology is generally applicable for control curves that can be represented as Lipschitz functions. The derived Lipschitz constants account for smart inverter hardware limitations for reactive power generation. A local policy is derived from the stability criterion that allows inverters to adapt their control curves by monitoring only local voltage, thus avoiding centralized control or information sharing with other inverters. The criterion is independent of the internal time-delays of smart inverters. Simulation results for inverters with and without the proposed stabilization technique demonstrate how smart inverters can mitigate voltage oscillations locally and mitigate real and reactive power flow disturbances at the substation under multiple scenarios. The study concludes with illustrations of how the control policy can dampen oscillations caused by solar intermittency and cyber-attacks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2011.09620,
  title  = {Lyapunov Stability of Smart Inverters Using Linearized DistFlow Approximation},
  author = {Shammya Shananda Saha and Daniel Arnold and Anna Scaglione and Eran Schweitzer and Ciaran Roberts and Sean Peisert and Nathan G. Johnson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.09620},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Accepted for IET Renewable Power Generation

R2 v1 2026-06-23T20:21:40.116Z