1. Introduction
The integration of renewable energy sources, which are usually located in remote areas, is often realised using high voltage direct current (HVDC) based on voltage sources converter (VSC) technology [
1]. In the operation of the VSC converter, the phase angle of the AC grid voltage at the point of common coupling is considered to be critical to ensure correct synchronisation of the connected power converter with the grid. Through synchronisation, only information of the fundamental component is extracted and provided to the converters [
2]. This information is typically obtained using the so-called phase-locked loop (PLL). When the PLL is locked, the output signal of the PLL synchronises with the input signal, where both signals oscillate at the same frequency with a particular value of a phase shift [
3]. In addition, the phase angle of the grid voltage is utilised to transform the sinusoidally varying AC quantities into quasistationary dq-axis quantities by means of the Park transformation. Hence, three-phase AC currents are transformed into their corresponding active and reactive components that can then be controlled independently using standard PI/PID regulators [
4,
5,
6]. Therefore, the ability of the PLL to accurately synchronise with the grid and estimate the phase angle of the grid voltage at the point of common coupling directly impacts the performance of the overall closed-loop system, and, in particular, its ability to independently control the exchange of active and reactive power with the AC grid at the point of common coupling. Hence, if PLL loses synchronisation with the grid, then, as a consequence, the corresponding VSC converter will also lose synchronisation with the AC system to which it is connected [
7].
The renewable energy sources are usually integrated into grids with long transmission lines, which leads to a large value of the Thevenin equivalent AC grid impedance, and such a system is called a “weak grid” [
8,
9]. Typically, the strength of the grid is measured by the short circuit ratio (SCR). According to [
10,
11], the SCR is the ratio of the short circuit capacity to DC link rated power, and it is mathematically defined as
where
is the short circuit capacity of the AC system at the point of common coupling and
is the rated DC power of the HVDC link. If the voltage at PCC is assumed to be identical to the base value, and the rated power of the HVDC is used as the base power of the AC system, Equation (
1) can be further simplified as
where
and
are the base values of the voltage and impedance, respectively, and
is the value of the impedance in per unit. Based on [
10], the strength of the AC system is strong if
,
for a weak grid and
for a very weak grid.
Weak grid connections impose challenges on the operation of the VSC-HVDC system. The voltage at the PCC becomes more sensitive to power variations in the case of the weak grid connections; this, in turn, will affect the stability and dynamic performance of the system [
12,
13]. The high sensitivity to power variations leads to high voltage fluctuations. Therefore, the utilised PLL needs to be sufficiently fast to lock with the variations in the voltage. However, fast PLL, i.e., large bandwidth, leads to high frequency components and noise to propagate through the system and causing system instability [
14]. In addition, there is a theoretical limitation for each value of SCR on the maximum power that the VSC-HVDC system can transmit to or from the AC system [
10,
15]. Another challenge emerges when the converter connected to the weak AC grid, which is the mutual coupling in controlling the active power and voltage. The interactions between the active power control and voltage control increase as the value of the grid impedance increases [
16]. Therefore, it is essential to consider the PLL both in terms of the static (steady-state) power transfer and the dynamic performance of the power converter.
Hence, several modifications in the PLL are suggested to deal with this problem. In [
17,
18], the voltage sensorless technique was proposed. In this method, a virtual flux concept is utilised to synchronise the converter with the grid at the point of synchronisation without any needing for the physical sensor, where PLL uses flux instead of the voltage to generate the angle of the point of synchronisation. However, this technique needs for advanced estimation method for providing the information of the grid impedance. Another approach that is suggested to deal with a weak grid problem is modifying the SRF-PLL by attaching a damping factor term in order to suppress the oscillation that exhibits in the voltage at PCC due to the weak grid connections [
19]. It was shown that with a certain value of the damping factor, the system stability is enhanced. However, this approach is limited to a weak grid with a
.
In [
20,
21], the impedance-conditioned phase-locked loop (IC-PLL) is proposed to address the issue of synchronisation with weak AC grid by supplementing the conventional synchronous reference frame phase-locked loop (SRF-PLL) with additional virtual impedance term. As a result, increasing the upper bound on the achievable power transfer achieved by the VSC converter connected to the weak grid [
21]. However, this approach requires for the grid impedance to be estimated accurately so that the virtual impedance branch compensates the high-value grid impedance. Hence, the VSC converter is synchronised to the point at the infinite bus voltage, where the voltage operates in a relatively robust manner concerning the perturbations that happen in the voltage at PCC. Refs. [
22,
23] show that the value of the virtual impedance has an impact on the dynamic performance of the system. The system provides the optimal dynamic response when the value of the virtual impedance equal to the value of the grid impedance. The task of grid synchronisation becomes particularly challenging in the cases where the grid impedance is varied, which is the case that IC-PLL needs for adapting the value of the virtual impedance so that the VSC converter maintains the synchronisation with the infinite bus voltage.
In the literature, the approaches that are used to estimate the value of the grid impedance is based on the deliberate creation of a disturbance at the PCC, and the value of impedance is calculated based on the grid response to this distortion. These disturbances can be based on power variation in both active and reactive power at the PCC [
24] and a current spike at PCC [
25]. However, the accuracy of the estimation depends on the size of the disturbances, which may become challenging in the case of a weak grid system. In addition, these approaches require for additional signal processing method to deal with the influence of the nonlinear loads connected close to PCC.
Therefore, the proposed AIC-PLL has the ability to estimate the value of the grid impedance so that the VSC converter maintains the synchronisation with the infinite bus voltage, without any requirements for the sophisticated methods of the impedance value estimation. Furthermore, this method does not require any source of disturbance, which is essential in the other methods, for the estimation of the accurate value of the grid impedance. Therefore, the VSC converter that uses AIC-PLL has the ability to transfer power equals to maximum theoretical power with a satisfactory dynamic performance in the case of the grid impedance variation.
The paper is organised as follows. In
Section 2, we provide a general description of the studied system. In
Section 3, we explain the operation limits of the VSC-HVDC system, where the maximum theoretical power and the maximum power that the VSC-HVDC system can transfer are explained. Descriptions about different types of PLL, including the proposed AIC-PLL, are provided in
Section 4. A study about stability limits for an AIC-PLL-based converter is provided in
Section 5; in this section, a comparison between AIC-PLL and IC-PLL (virtual impedance equals to grid impedance) with the theoretical maximum power is given for a range of grid impedance. In
Section 6, dynamic performance studies for AIC-PLL- and IC-PLL-based converters are given considering various parameters. The impact of the AIC-PLL low pass filter on the dynamic performance of the system is described in
Section 7. Finally, in
Section 8, we provide the conclusion.
2. Overview of the General System Configuration
The studied system is shown in
Figure 1. The overall system consists of two main parts: the upper part, which represents the AC network (in this part,
and
represent the converter resistance and inductance), and
and
represent the grid resistance and inductance, respectively. The
represents the AC capacitor connected to the filter bus. The symbols
,
and
represent the voltage vector of the VSC converter, the filter bus and AC source, respectively.
V,
U and
E are their corresponding voltage magnitudes. The AC source is considered as the voltage reference, and it is a constant-frequency stiff voltage source. The phase angle of
,
are
and
, respectively. The symbols
P and
Q are the active and reactive powers from the VSC to the AC system. The quantity
is the current vector of the phase reactor, and
is the current vector to the AC source.
In this system, the active power and voltage magnitude are controlled at the point of common coupling through outer loop controller, by which the desired value of the converter current is manipulated. The presuperscript c for any quantity refers to the converter side for that quantity, and postsubscripts d and q refer to d and q components.
5. Stability Limits of AIC-PLL-Based VSC Converter
In order to study the stability of the system for various types of PLLs, the operating points of the system are obtained first. The operating points are calculated by solving
for
numerically, where the
is the set of the nonlinear Equation (
A16) that are provided in the
Appendix B. The maximum theoretical power that is calculated by Equation (
3) for a certain value of the grid impedance is approximately equal to the maximum power by which the nonlinear equations return a real solution. However, the system may not be able to operate according to the calculated operating points, i.e., these operating points are unstable. The operating points
are considered stable if all the eigenvalues of the matrix A, which is provided in the
Appendix C, has negative real parts, where this method is referred as the first method of Lyapunov [
27].
The results of the small signal stability analysis for different types of PLLs are shown in
Figure 7, where
p.u. for
p.u. and
rad/s.
Figure 7 shows the maximum transferred power in per unit for two VSC converters utilising two types of PLLs, IC-PLL with
and AIC-PLL, for a range of values of grid impedance
and for the inverter and rectifier operations. It can be observed that the values of the maximum active power at which the system maintains stable for both types of the IC-PLL- and AIC-PLL-based converters are equal, and they are approximately equal to the theoretical maximum power. Therefore, the converter that utilises AIC-PLL is capable of reaching the maximum theoretical power transfer in the same way that the IC-PLL does, in spite the fact that the AIC-PLL does not require any information about the value of the grid impedance. Moreover, it can be concluded from this result that the AIC-PLL is able to imitate the IC-PLL with
in terms of the power transfer capability, as the converter that utilises AIC-PLL is also synchronised to the infinite bus voltage
E. Therefore, the AIC-PLL possibly replaces the IC-PLL in the case that the maximum power transfer is demanded, and the estimation of the value of the grid impedance is challenging, in particular, the grid strength changes.
6. Dynamic Performance Study for AIC-PLL-Based VSC Converter
In this section, the dynamic performance of the AIC-PLL-based converter is investigated for different points in the grid strength. The performance of the AIC-PLL-based system is studied by examining the dynamic response of the system to the changing in the value of the grid impedance and the value of the active power. For each point of the grid impedance, an experiment is conducted, and two step changes are applied. The first step is on the grid impedance, and this is to simulate the variation that may occur in the grid impedance value in the real system, and how the AIC-PLL has the ability to recover the changing in this value. The second step change is for the active power, and this is to examine the effectiveness of the AIC-PLL-based converter in terms of dealing with variation in active power. In order to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method, the time-domain response of the active power for the AIC-PLL-based converter is compared with two cases of the IC-PLL-based converters. The first one is the IC-PLL with a constant value of the virtual impedance, i.e., the value of does not change according to the changing in the grid impedance. The second case is when the value of the is changing according to the changing in the grid impedance; hence, the relation is maintained during the operation of the system.
The first experiment is when the value of the grid impedance changes from
p.u. in the inverter operation; then, another step change in active power is applied which is
p.u.
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10 show the responses of active power and
, respectively.
Figure 8 shows the result of the time-domain response of the active power for different converters utilise different types of PLLs. It is clear from the figure the converter that utilises the IC-PLL with
has the optimal response as it shows less oscillation than the other two approaches with less settling time. However, for the system that relays on the IC-PLL without updating the value of the virtual impedance (IC-PLL
p.u.), the result shows that the time-domain response exhibits the highest oscillatory response. In the case that the system uses the proposed method AIC-PLL, the result shows that the time-domain response of the active power suffers far less oscillation than the IC-PLL with
p.u., and it has slightly more oscillation amplitude than the case of IC-PLL with
. Therefore, from this result, it can be concluded that the proposed AIC-PLL has the ability to recover the changing that occurs in the grid impedance.
Figure 9 shows the time-domain response of the active power for the applied step change in the active power for the VSC converters with different types of PLLs for the same above experiment at a different time where the value of the grid impedance
p.u.
It can be seen from
Figure 9 that the dynamic response for the case of IC-PLL with (
) exhibits higher overshoot than the other two cases. However, for the case of the converter that utilises AIC-PLL, the results in
Figure 9 show that the response exhibits relatively higher oscillation amplitude than the other two cases. It can be concluded from the results in
Figure 8 and
Figure 9 that the proposed AIC-PLL has the ability to deliver the maximum power with satisfactory dynamic performance.
Figure 10 shows the response of the phase angle
that is generated by different types of PLLs. In this figure, two y-axes for the phase angle
are included; the left y-axis is for the IC-PLL (
p.u.), as it generates a larger phase angle scale than the other two cases. For the other two cases of the PLLs, the right y-axis is devoted. It is clear from the figure that the time-domain response that is generated by IC-PLL (
p.u.) exhibits higher oscillatory with higher settling time than the other two cases. In addition, the value of
in the case of IC-PLL (
p.u.) does not converge to zero. However, the result shows that the response of the
for the IC-PLL with (
) has more oscillatory than the case of AIC-PLL. This is because in the second case, another closed loop is involved in the AIC-PLL (
Figure 4) where the
is considered as the control signal in this loop, and this is not the case for IC-PLL.
The experiment is reconducted for the different step change where the value of the grid impedance change is
p.u., and the results are provided in
Figure 11,
Figure 12 and
Figure 13.
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 show the response of the active power for the step change in the grid impedance (
p.u.), and the step change in the value of the active power, respectively. It can be observed that the responses of the active power for the cases of IC-PLL with (
) and the AIC-PLL have far better responses than the case of IC-PLL with (
p.u.), as the first two cases provide lower oscillatory and settling time than the second case.
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 also show that the response of the active power in the case of AIC-PLL is slightly better than the case of IC-PLL with (
), as the former case provides less oscillatory and settling time than the latter case. Therefore, it can be concluded that in the case of the weak grid, the converter that utilises AIC-PLL has the ability to replace the ideal IC-PLL in the case of the grid variation where the estimation of the grid is complicated.
Figure 13 is the time domain response for the produced angle of the three types of PLL.
From the result in
Figure 13, it can be concluded that the response of the phase angles for different types of PLLs have the same indication as for the result in
Figure 10. In addition, By comparing
Figure 10 and
Figure 13, it is clear that the dynamic response of the angle in the case of IC-PLL with (
) has a higher oscillatory amplitude in the case of the second experiment than the first experiment. It reaches 2 degrees for the second experiment while it reaches about 0.5 degree in the first case, which is due to the larger value of the grid impedance in the second case. The dynamic response of the angle
has an impact on the dynamic response of the active power, and the larger the value of the angle, the higher impact on the response of the active power. As a result of this, the response of the active power in the case of the AIC-PLL is relatively better than the case of the IC-PLL (
) for the larger value of the grid impedance, which is evident in
Figure 11 and
Figure 12.
For further validation and reliability of the proposed AIC-PLL, experiments for different values of operating points and different values of the changing in the value of the grid impedance are conducted and the values of the sum of square of error (SSE) for the active power tracking are calculated. Two different operating points are chosen, and of the maximum transferred power of different values of the grid impedance. A step change in the active power is applied which is of the selected operating point. Other experiments are also conducted, where the value of the active power is the maximum and the step change in the grid impedance is applied. Different step change percentages are applied and they depend on the value of the grid impedance, the larger the value of the grid impedance the smaller the value of the step change. The results of this experiment are presented in Figures 14, 16 and 18 for the inverter operation and Figures 15, 17 and 19 for the rectifier operation.
In
Figure 14,
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17, bar charts represent the values of the SSE. A line graph represents the relative errors between the value of SSE of IC-PLL and SSE of AIC-PLL. It is clear from the results that both methods are approximate equals in terms of the dynamic responses, which indicates by the inconsiderable value of the relative error. In the case of the inverter operation, it can be concluded from the results in
Figure 14 and
Figure 16 that the dynamic response of the IC-PLL-based converter is better than the AIC-PLL-based one for the strong grid. This difference in the dynamic response is reduced as the value of the grid impedance increases to become positive for the value of the
p.u. However, in the case of the rectifier operation, the results in
Figure 15 and
Figure 17 show that the converter that relies on the AIC-PLL provides a better dynamic response than the case of the IC-PLL-based converter for the whole range of the grid impedance. This is indicated by the value of the relative error, which is positive.
Figure 18 and
Figure 19 represent the results of the value of SSE for both types of PLLs-based converters when the value of the grid impedance is changing for the inverter and rectifier operations, respectively. The values of these changes are
, where
p.u. The value of the relative errors are also presented as a line graph in order to show the difference between the SSE values of the IC-PLL and AIC-PLL for the range of the grid impedance.
In the case of the inverter operation,
Figure 18 shows that the values of SSE for the IC-PLL-based converter is less than the value of SSE for the case of the AIC-PLL-based converter for
p.u., which is indicated by the value of the error. The results also show that the error is positive for
p.u., which indicates that the proposed method has the ability to provide better dynamic performance as the value of the grid impedance increases. In the case of the rectifier operation,
Figure 19 shows that the converter that utilises AIC-PLL has the ability to provide better dynamic performance than the case of the system that uses IC-PLL for the whole range of the grid impedance. This is clear from the relative error line graph, which is positive for the whole range of the grid impedance value.
7. The Impact of Changing the Value of PLL Bandwidth on the AIC-PLL Dynamic Performance
In this section, the effect of changing the value of the PLL bandwidth
, which is related to the PLL compensator bandwidth, on the dynamic performance of the converter is considered. The compensator bandwidth is
of the bandwidth of the PLL low pass filter [
21]. Therefore, when the value of the
changes, the controller parameters change accordingly. In order to understand how the impact of changing the value of
on the dynamic performance of the system, the root locus of the closed-loop system’s poles in the s-domain is examined by sweeping the
rad/s, and the results are plotted in
Figure 20. The participation matrix are then calculated, and the states that have the highest participation factors to the plotted eigenvalues are revealed.
In
Figure 20, the only eigenvalues
are included, since they have the highest rates of change in their positions than other eigenvalues. From the participation matrix (the participation matrix are provided in
Appendix D), these eigenvalues have the highest participation factors to the states that are related to the PLL. These states are the phase angle
, the augmented state of the PLL’s PI controller
and the virtual voltage
. It is clear from the result that all the positions of the eigenvalues are shifted towards the left as the value of the PLL bandwidth increases. This indicates that for the case of the AIC-PLL the value of the PLL bandwidth does not have an impact on the stability and the dynamic performance of the system. This is because the value of
is minimal, which is due to the including of the estimation closed-loop. Therefore, this will not have an obvious impact on the dynamic performance of the active power. In order to understand this effect, the time-domain responses of the active power and the phase angle
for different values of
rad/s are plotted in
Figure 21 and
Figure 22,
It is clear from
Figure 21 that the dynamic response of the active power for the converter that utilises AIC-PLL with different values of
are approximately identical, which indicates the fact that changing the value of PLL bandwidth does not have any impact on the response of the active power.
Figure 22 shows the time-domain response of the phase angle
for different value of
, and it is clear that as the value of the bandwidth increases the
has a better response in terms of the oscillatory and the settling time. This is due to the increase in the value of the PI compensator parameters, which in turn, increases the speed of the PI controller. In addition, the result in
Figure 22 shows that the range of the variation is inconsiderable to have an impact on the response of the active power.