Frontiers in Energy Research (Jan 2024)
Co-evaluation of power system frequency performance and operational reliability considering the frequency regulation capability of wind power
Abstract
With the increasing proportion of renewable energy, the power system inertia decreases, and the operation uncertainty rises. It brings concerns about the system frequency and operational reliability. However, the impacts of the power system frequency performance on the reliability parameters of generation units have not been fully investigated. This paper studies the frequency performance and the operational reliability co-evaluation for power systems considering wind turbines. Firstly, a power system frequency regulation model is established considering the regulation capability of wind turbines. Then, the cluster of equivalent wind turbines is incorporated into the frequency regulation architecture of thermal power units, which accelerates the analysis of frequency performance. Then, the frequency performance of the power system with the participation of wind turbines under the operation uncertainty and the unit random faults is quantitatively analyzed. A frequency-dependent generator reliability parameter model is derived. Next, a multi-time scale co-evaluation framework is proposed to realize the co-evaluation of frequency performance and operational reliability. Case studies are carried out on the modified IEEE RTS-79 system and a provincial power system. Results show that compared with the existing research, the proposed method can obtain the frequency performance and reliability results efficiently.
Keywords