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Review

Constant Power Loads (CPL) with Microgrids: Problem Definition, Stability Analysis and Compensation Techniques

1
Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Misan, Al-Amarah, Misan 62001, Iraq
2
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Gazi University, Besevler, Ankara 06500, Turkey
3
Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering Science, University of Johannesburg, Auckland Park, Johannesburg 2006, South Africa
4
Faculty of Engineering, Østfold University College, Kobberslagerstredet 5, 1671 Kråkeroy, Norway
5
Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Salerno, Salerno, 84084 Fisciano (SA), Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2017, 10(10), 1656; https://doi.org/10.3390/en10101656
Submission received: 31 August 2017 / Revised: 27 September 2017 / Accepted: 30 September 2017 / Published: 19 October 2017
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovative Methods for Smart Grids Planning and Management)

Abstract

:
This paper provides a comprehensive review of the major concepts associated with the μgrid, such as constant power load (CPL), incremental negative resistance or impedance (INR/I) and its dynamic behaviours on the μgrid, and power system distribution (PSD). In general, a μgrid is defined as a cluster of different types of electrical loads and renewable energy sources (distributed generations) under a unified controller within a certain local area. It is considered a perfect solution to integrate renewable energy sources with loads as well as with a traditional grid. In addition, it can operate with a conventional grid, for example, by energy sourcing or a controllable load, or it can operate alone as an islanding mode to feed required electric energy to a grid. Hence, one of the important issues regarding the μgrid is the constant power load that results from the tightly designed control when it is applied to power electronic converters. The effect of CPL is incremental negative resistance that impacts the power quality of a power system and makes it at negative damping. Also, in this paper, a comprehensive study on major control and compensation techniques for μgrid has been included to face the instability effects of constant power loads. Finally, the merits and limitations of the compensation techniques are discussed.

1. Introduction

The development of electronic switch devices has led to penetrations of power electronic applications in a power system [1,2], advanced control approaches, and more renewable energy sources [3], and on the other hand an increase in energy demands that has consequently led to increased environmental problems such as greenhouse gases being emitted from non-renewable energy sources [4,5]; all these factors have contributed to the appearance of new applications in power systems and have taken many forms in modern life [6]. One of these applications is the μgrid, a new concept for a power system. The μgrid is proposed to avoid other issues like voltage variations and protection problems when renewable energy sources were placed individually in a power system [7]. The μgrid is a combination of distributed generations, including renewable energy sources and storage devices, and different types and electrical loads interface with a power electronic converter under the control approach in order to achieve proper system operation. The μgrid can connect to the LV of a traditional distribution network and also can operate as islanded from a distribution system for some cases like a fault in the main distribution grid [7]. From consumers’ perspective, the μgrid contributes to feed different types of load and power quality by supporting voltage for end users and reduces emissions by using clean energy sources [8,9,10]. In addition, it has improved local stability, increased the efficiency of the system and improved the reliability of the power system by bringing renewable energy sources into reach of consumers [7].
A few years ago, the μgrid attracted the attention of researcher [11,12,13]. Those researchers introduced the concept of the μgrid and solutions to its challenges via stability analysis of the μgrid in connected and islanded modes [8,14], integration of distributed generations [15,16,17,18,19] and harmonics elimination [20]. The following factors will depict vital issues related to constant power loads (CPL) and their effect on the μgrid. CPLs affect the power quality of electric system and bring instability, which eventually might lead the system into failure [21,22,23]. Because of the demand to meet the proper requirements of different loads, μgrids usually have a large number of power electronic elements for cascade, parallel, driving, and isolation, which are together known as a multi-converter power electronic system [24,25]. In control topology, the converter plays a very important role. Some controls needs to apply to converters of μgrid to maintain the system characteristics (voltage, frequency and power share between distributed generations (DG)) at desired values or regulate these values during transient or sudden increasing of loads [9,10,26]. For example, a common control method is droop control in islanded mode [8]. While most control approaches are well designed and satisfy the stability requirements in islanded mode and grid connected for a single converter, the stability of a cascaded convertors system is still a big issue as a result of complex interfacing among converters of the system [1]. As a result, most load converters behave as a constant power load. Many solutions have been proposed to mitigate or solve this problem, but these solutions have some limitations and also focus on DC-DSP. In this paper, the major compensation techniques and their control approaches used to face CPL instability effects in the μgrid and power system distribution will be considered.
The following topics will be addressed: Section 2. Concept of μgrid; Section 3. Definition of constant power load and its sources and effects; Section 4. A brief review of major control and compensation techniques to mitigate the instability effects of constant power loads; and Section 5. Discussion of results and conclusions.

2. The μgrid

The μgrid is defined by the Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology Solutions (CERTS) in the USA as “An aggregation of loads and micro-sources operating as a single system providing both power and heat”. Another definition set by the European MICROGRIDS project is “a low voltage distribution network comprising various DG, storage devices and controllable loads that can operate interconnected or isolated from the main distribution grids” [26,27,28]. The μgrid was introduced as an efficient solution to guarantee the reliable operation of distribution generating (DG) when DGs operate in connected mode or islanded mode [6,25,29,30]. μgrid is a tiny power system consisting of a set of different distributed generations, loads, power electronic elements, and transmission systems, as shown in Figure 1.
Distributed generations cover renewable energy sources like a PV system, a wind power system or micro-turbine systems, and storage systems like a fuel cell system [8,28,31,32]. The output energy (magnitude and form of current and voltage) from distribution generating is not suitable for use by consumers because it is affected by environmental conditions and the DGs cannot connect directly to buses of the distribution grid [7,9,10,31,33,34]. Therefore, DGs connect to a common bus by the interfacing converters to convert the output power (voltage and current) utility-grade for an AC or DC system with the desired magnitude voltage and current, and frequency for an AC system [31,34,35]. The concept of the μgrid becomes suitable and attractive due to power electronic converter facilities, in which it overcomes some difficulties found in the traditional AC network like power loss in transformers and long transmission lines, and high voltage transformation [33]. In islanding mode, the response of the μgrid for the regulation of common bus is by making a one power converter master and others slaves or making all sources take part in the regulation and of transfer energy to the loads [13].
According to [3,18], loads in the electronic power system are divided among three groups: constant voltage load, constant current load, and constant power load. The first group sinks the constant value of voltage from the source regardless of the current. This type includes conventional resistive loads such as heating equipment, and inductive loads [19]. The constant current load draws a fixed current under wide variations of voltage source and has transducer and arc lamp as examples. The last type is CPL and will be the subject of this research. More details and examples about constant power loads are given in the following sections. The connection between elements of μgrid, like the traditional grid, can be achieved by ring or radial connections [9].

3. Constant Power Loads

3.1. Problem Definition

Some power systems need a multiconverter to provide the system with various power and voltage forms [22,36,37]; these are known as multiconverter power electronic system [24,25]. This type of system consists of large number of power electronic devices in parallel, cascade, stacking and splitting configurations for loads and source to achieve proper required operation [24]. One multiconverter power electronic type is the cascade system of a converter, shown in Figure 2, which consists of a source converter that provides the regulated voltage to the system (others are called upstream converters or voltage regulators) and a second convertor that converts the line voltage to proper value and frequency for each load [21,38]. A multiconverter has a large variety of operation instructions because of the interconnection of components of the multiconverter [22,36,37].
The load converters (second stage of multiconverter) tend to display the properties of a constant power load when control is applied tightly [22,36,37], which means a converter has a fast response and low output ripple [37]; therefore, the converter behaves as the CPL with their control bandwidth [39]. Constant power loads (CPL) means that the output power of the convertor is constant, i.e., the output voltage drops when small variations occur in the current value (increasing current amount), which means that when neglecting the dissipated power into the circuit, the output power and input power are equal [22,36]. In fact, the converter behaves as a CPL when it has closed loop control and as a resistive load in open loop as in Figure 3 [1,40]. The power electronic converters tends to have CPL properties if them output voltage is bigger than voltage reference (Vc) [21,22,30,41,42,43]; in other word, the converter behaves as resistive load at start-up but as a CPL when it exceeds the value of voltage reference (Vc) [30].
Many loads like motor drives or electronic loads with tightly regulated controllers behave as a constant power load [22,36,37]. Figure 4 is an example of CPL, where the motor is driving by DC-AC inverter, and the inverter is tightly regulated to control the speed. When the load is rotating, the motor will have one to one of torque-speed characteristics and the relationship between the speed and torque is linear.
For a linear relationship, each value of speed has only one corresponding value of torque. Therefore, the power equals the multiplication of torque and speed, which will be constant [22,36,37].
Another example is a DC-DC converter, which feeds the electric load and is tightly controlled to maintain an output voltage fixed on the load [22,36,37], as shown in Figure 2. The power of the load is constant when there is a linear relationship between voltage and current.
In CPL, the output power will be equal to the input power, neglecting power losses in the system. As in [44], the mathematical model of CPL can be derived as follows:
P i n = P o u t = c o n s .
The differential change in the input power can be expressed as:
P ( v , i ) = 0 = v d i + i d v .
The input incremental resistance rin can be defined as:
r i n = d v d i = v i .
The negative sign that appears in Equation (3) means that the CPL characteristics can be explained by the negative slope of the V−I curve shown in Figure 5 [45]. The CPL has inherent incremental negative resistance (INR). There is more than one way to realise a mathematical formula of INR [22]. This instability effect of NIR does not discuss when the converter is designed but in a multiconverter the level should be taken into consideration. This phenomenon will impact the stability of μgrid and make the LC filter oscillatory [46].

3.2. The Negative Incremental Resistance (NIR) of the Constant Power Loads (CPL)

The converter that is used for open loop or bad close loop control does not have constant power load properties. The CPL consumed a fixed power and Negative Incremental Resistance with its bandwidth control. In the CPL, the relative rate of change between the voltage and current is negative (dv/di < 0), but the instantaneous value of impedance is positive (V/I > 0) [21,22,36,37,42,43,47,48]. The stability point of a system means; the system will return to a specific point if any disturbance occurs. The steady state point in a system that includes the CPL is obtained when the CPL voltage is equal to the voltage source. At this point, the system will be stable. Nevertheless, if any disturbance occurs, the system cannot return to this point [49,50].
This can be understood as follows: if a small disturbance makes the load voltage less than the voltage value of the stable point then the load current will be bigger than the load current at constant power of the load and result in the filter capacitor being discharged. Thus, the load current will increase to make the power constant and at the same time the voltage will decrease. If a system does not have a proper control to prevent this phenomenon during transient or any small disturbance, the voltage will be zero and the current will go to infinity. Previously the system behaved as a feedforward. Now if there are any changes in the voltage of the source converter (i.e., decreasing), the load converter will increase the duty cycle to regulate the voltage, which means the current will increase to maintain constant power [49].
Figure 6 includes the connection of CPL with the parallel capacitor [22]; the state equation of the circuit can be written as follows:
v c = P i   and   i = C d v c d t   .
The solution of these equations gives
v c 2 = V c 2 2 P C t   and   i = P V c 2 + 2 P C t .
The solved equations show the circuit that exists from the CPL and parallel capacitor is unstable because as (t = V c 2 C/2P) the voltage goes to zero and the current goes to infinity. Therefore, the CPL is unstable with a parallel capacitor. The equilibrium point of the circuit is when voltage of CPL is equal to the source voltage. In other cases, the system loses its stability and cannot restore the steady state because the INR of CPL and voltage will go to infinity as the current goes to zero and vice versa.

3.3. Negative Incremental Resistance Effects on the μgrid

As mentioned previously, a system that has a CPL could be unstable. This instability is produced by the interaction between the power system structure and the negative impedance created by the CPLs. Negative incremental impedance impacts the power quality of the system and can lead to system voltage oscillations or even collapse, and reduces system damping. These system voltage oscillations put additional stress on the components and may lead to the system failing or its components being damaged [23,25].
Most often, a filter, which usually consist of inductor (L) and capacitor (C), place after a pulse width modulation power converter to minimise the input current harmonics. Because of the small value of the resistance of the LC filter, a large transient oscillation can occur between L, C when operating conditions change suddenly [51].
CPL instability will occur when the applied control on a system is tightly regulated and has a closed loop. Feedback controllers of the closed loop depend on the process output (voltage or power). The NIR of CPL makes the damping of the input LC filter of multiconverter system negative and the LC filter oscillatory [52]. Therefore, this oscillation at the output will make the system unstable. Thus, the instability effects of CPL (INR) can be summarised on any power electronic system as mentioned in [2,25] as follows: CPL reduces the equivalent resistance of the system, causes a high inrush current as the voltage builds up slowly from its initial value, makes the system poorly dampened and impacts on the stability [37,38,47,53,54], which causes limit cycle oscillation in the DC bus voltage and currents and may lead to voltage collapse [23,53,55].

4. Compensation Techniques Used to Combat the Instability Effects of CPL

Because of the non-linearity and time dependency of converters’ operation and the incremental negative impedance effects of constant power loads, classical linear control methods (like a conventional proportional integral PI controller) have stability limitations around the operating points and are not applicable to these systems. Therefore, digital and nonlinear stabilising control methods must be applied to ensure large-signal stability [21,22,36,42,48,56,57]. Compensation Techniques of the instability of CPL can be achieved by adding an extra element like passive elements or devices to the power system, or redesigned the control loop of a source or load converter [25,58]. The following sections summarise the methods used to compensate for the instability effects of INR in previous years.

4.1. Passive Damping

Passive damping is a simple method to increase the damping of a system by adding passive elements; which are contain resistance (R), inductor (L) and capacitor (C), to the input filter of the system, as described in [39,59]. The authors introduced three methods for passive damping by adding RC and RL in parallel with input filter and RL in series. In [60], the method used is adding only R in parallel with the L-filter. As in [39], the method proposed here to stabilise the system is minimisation of the peak output impedance of the filter by adding a passive damping (passive elements) circuit to the LC filter. The stability of the CPL system requires the impedance ratio Zd/Z1 to meet the Nyquist stability criterion, or alternatively, the characteristic polynomial of (1/(1 + Zd/Z1)) to meet the Routh–Hurwitz criterion. The paper introduced three methods of passive damping: (a) RC parallel damping; (b) RL parallel damping; (c) RL series damping, as shown in Figure 7.
These methods were tested by the authors, who obtained the following results: the best method is adding RC parallel damping because large CPL compensation by RL parallel damping is needed to minimise the L-filter, which is undesirable. RL series damping can compensate only if RCPL > (3L/2C)1/2 and the dissipated average power is the biggest in RL series damping and RC parallel damping and the smallest in RL parallel damping.
Another method to achieve passive damping was developed by [61,62]. The effect of the converter parasitic, which includes the resistance of the ‘ON’ switch, inductor and diode in the presence of CPLs, is analysed in detail under both converter operation modes; continuous conduction mode (CCM) and discontinuous conduction mode (DCM). Also, design recommendations are presented to face instabilities of CPL in a DC distribution system with a pure CPL and a combination of CPL with resistive loads.
This method is simple to implement. It does not require the addition of any control terms to the control loop of the system. By using this method, the stability of the system is achieved. The efficiency of the system is decreased because there will be a greater power loss when using this method. It will be expensive when passive elements are added, especially capacitors. This method in [39,59] is valid for small disturbances [60].

4.2. Active Damping

Active damping, another solution to the instability problem introduced by INR, involves a modification control loop by creating a damping effect of passive damping or modifying the DC bus capacitance. Also, it can be achieved by adding a device that injects a compensating current [63]. The active damping can be done by three methods [2]. The first is source-side active damping. The compensation at the source subsystem by active damping aims to add loop in loop control to improve the output impedance of feeder converter to satisfy the impedance stability criterion. This type is impossible to apply to a system when the input stage is LC or uncontrolled rectifiers. To overcome the instability effect of INR, the CPL side Active Damping is considered when the source subsystem of a CPL is LC filter. The concept of this method is achieved by injecting a current or power into the CPL control loops to modify the input impedance Zin, such that Middlebrook’s stability criteria are satisfied [2,25]. The third is adding auxiliary device that injects the desired compensating current within operation range system.
Virtual impedance or resistance is one method of active damping introduced by researchers in [34,45,54,63,64,65,66,67,68]. Active damping, by adding virtual resistance, achieves the improvement transfer function of a system and forces the movement of the poles towards stable region (left half of s-plane). It guarantees that any extra power does not dissipate into the system [45,63,64], as in Figure 8a. In fact, the virtual resistance makes the output impedance of the source converter less than its maximum value [58]. The output voltage V is measured and controlled to track the reference voltage VrefiLReq instead of a constant voltage reference, as shown in Figure 8b. The new reference value will vary according to the value of the load current and hence produces the equivalent function of adding physical resistor Req. [45,64]. In [63] the authors presented a new method to overcome the problems of CPL by adding virtual resistance, which will affect the series resistance with an inductor to feedback control system. In [34] the authors introduced the virtual impedance as series-connected resistance and inductance and two types of stabiliser; one is based on capacitor voltage feedback, and the other is based on inductance current feedback for achieving a virtual impedance method and a model including a droop control index. In [66] an additional proportional voltage feedback control is inserted with virtual resistance to improve the system performance and overcome the disadvantages which produced from adding a large value of virtual resistance. One of these advantages is the region stability of virtual resistance will narrow as the output power increases [2].
In [69] a feed-forward control with extra elements to improve the stability of hybrid electric vehicles (HEV) with CPL is introduced. The purpose of this method is changing the impedance of the load converter to match the impedance of the source. The changes are approved by the impedance frequency and analysed by a low pass filter, and negative impedance can be eliminated by adjusting the virtual resistance in the control loop. In [70], active damping was achieved by modifying the duty ratio of the converter by using a first-order high-pass filter with a corner frequency and high magnitude.
In [71,72], the authors presented an input-resistance compensator to eliminate the instability of INR in a system that has a power electronic brushless DC motor drive with constant power-load characteristics, as shown in Figure 9. The strategy is to feed a portion of the changes in the DC-link voltage into the current control loop to modify the system input impedance in the mid-frequency range and thereby to damp the input filter. The input-resistance compensator is a high-pass filter with corner frequency and high frequency magnitude. Its operation depends on the DC link voltage. the current output is a current (the stabilising signal) that will act with the speed control loop to give a current reference to the control motor current by high frequency pulse width modulation (PWM) with a duty cycle determined by the PI controller. At steady state, the authors assumed the output of IRC will be zero if there is a change in the DC link voltage but if the output of IRC is non-zero, then a signal will be generated to modify the motor current and the inverter input impedance, damp the DC-link oscillations.
In [23] a new device called a solid state defender (SSD) is added between the load converter and source to protect the system and its elements against the fault and instability phenomena of INR and prevent the system from failure or damage of components. The SSD works as a power buffer in the bus fault case and transfers the stored energy in a capacitor to feed the load and current limiting in load fault by limiting output current. On the other hand, it works as an impedance transformer to address the oscillation and transience produced by INR. The SSD improves the power quality of the system and eliminates the oscillations caused by the negative incremental impedance characteristic of loads. Active damping has received interest from researchers [34,45,54,58,63,64,65,66,67,68,73]; however, active damping causes effective performance but only compensates for limited values of CPL [25] and sometimes causes the output voltage to drop, as in [63].

4.3. The Space Pole Placement Control

The Space Pole Placement Control is used to shift the pole of the system from RHP to LHP of the s-plane. A new pole location must be chosen to satisfy the characteristic equation of the closed loop system to make the system is stable. According to the paper, this method can be achieved by multiplying the specific gain (calculated by Ackermann’s formula) by the state variables (inductor current and voltage capacitor) in closed loop control. However, the result is subtracting from the reference voltage. The generated switch pulse has been produced from comparison of the difference with the tooth signal as shown in Figure 10 [49]. This method needs to represent all the state variables in a control loop [2,49].

4.4. Pulse Adjustment Control Technique

The papers [43,48,56,74] presented pulse adjustment control technique as a new control method to damp the instability caused by CPL with a DC-DC converter in vehicular systems. The pulse adjustment control is a digital control that drives the PWM control. The adjustment controller regulates the output voltage by generating high and low power pulse through comparing the output voltage and reference (desired) voltage and sending this pulse to the PWM. For output voltage (capacitor voltage) less than the reference voltage the controller will increase the transferred energy from input to output. The CPL will consume the required energy and voltage will be increased as a result of charging the capacitor with the remaining power as in Figure 11. This paper presented the same controller as in [48] to provide the buck–boost converter but in discontinuous conduction mode (DCM). The drawbacks of this technique are high output voltage ripple, noise and the sub-harmonic presented at the output voltage, although it has fast response times and a robust controller [75].

4.5. Sliding Mode Control

Sliding mode control has been used to address the instability effects of INR in the literature [21,25,36,57,76,77,78,79,80,81,82]. The aim of this controller is to control the output power of a DC-DC converter with CPL by setting the reference value of power and comparing it with the measured output power of the DC-DC converter [21,36]. The proposed sliding mode control outputs a duty ratio, which is used to generate pulse width modulated (PWM) gate signals for the DC-DC converter.
This controller improves signal stability and dynamic response; however, it is sensitive to large changes in load [36] and the controller is effective at a high voltage above 400 volts but has disturbance at low voltages [57], which means the output voltage is not fixed.
In [36], the authors tested the CPL with a parallel capacitor by using a series inductor and a buck converter. The circuit is unstable: instability will quickly appear in the buck converter and other instability will occur within a short time. Due to the instability of CPL that occurs within an interval smaller than the switching time, there is a need to increase the switching frequency of L and C. The paper presented the sliding mode as improving the large signal stability and dynamic response of the buck converter. The objective of the control system in DC-DC converters with constant power loads is to control the output power. Pout is the output power and K is the output power reference.
1-
Buck converter with CPL in Figure 12 can be written using the state space averaging method:
x . 1 = 1 L x 2 + d L V i n
x . 2 = 1 C x 1 1 R C x 2 ,
where x1 and x2 are the moving average of the inductor current and the output voltage of the converter, respectively.
2-
The authors in [36] assumed that K is the output power reference and forced the output power to be equal to this value by sliding mode control, as follows:
P o u t t < 0 P o u t > K
P o u t t > 0 P o u t < K .
3-
The following equation satisfies the above requirements:
P o u t t = λ ( P o u t K ) ,
where λ is a positive real number and is called the convergence factor.
4-
The objective of this paper is to obtain the duty cycle for the buck converter by combining Equations (1) and (3);
d ( t ) = 1 L x 2 2 λ ( 1 λ R C 2 ) ( x 2 2 R K ) 1 C 1 x 2 2 ( λ R C 2 ) 2 ( x 2 2 R K ) 2 x 2 v i n L .
In [77] the stable sliding surface (s), shown in Figure 13a, is designed to obtain system control law (u) is to meet the system stability requirements with reference values for the inductor current and capacitor voltage. The stable sliding surface (s) can be written:
s = x 1 x 2 x 1 r x 2 r + μ ( x 2 x 2 r )
The control law (u) can be written:
u 1 2 ( 1 sgn ( s ) ) = { 1   if   s < 0 0   if   s > 0
In [57], a third-order SMC is applied to control the buck converter. The signal triangle is regulated by the input voltage to use with SMC output to generate a signal control to drive the converter, as in Figure 13b.

4.6. Model Predictive Control

In the literature [51,55,83,84,85], researchers introduced a model predictive control as a solution to mitigate the instability caused by CPL. In [84], a power buffer interfaces between the source converter and CPL to modify the load impedance of during a transient or fault case. The model predictive controller (MPC) controls the variation of the DC link voltage and modifies of the load impedance which is seen at the point of common coupling. In [51], MPC is used with hybrid energy storage to manipulate the energy flows between generator, load, and a hybrid ES which is shown in Figure 14. In [51,84], the MPC is not utilised directly to compensate the instability effects of CPL but in [84] there is introduced an optimal trade-off between modification of load impedance, variation of DC-link voltage and battery current ripples; in [51] this is used to design and/or specify the requirements for the ES to achieve the desired transient response. The required duty cycle of converter is calculated based on MPC strategies to mitigate the instability induced by CPL. The duty cycle configurations are chosen to guarantee the stabilisation of the CPL by associating the CPL current and voltage with the predicted output voltage values of the converter [55].

4.7. Feedback Linearization

Feedback linearization is a nonlinear control technique to overcome the instability caused by CPL, as proposed in [47,52,86,87,88]. This technique aims to cancel the nonlinearity introduced by CPL by determining the parameters that can be manipulated to obtain a system without instability without using a conventional PI controller, which has its disadvantages.
In [47], the authors discuss the stability of a DC-DC buck converter that is feeding the resistive load (constant voltage load (CVL)) and CPL as in Figure 15, the large signal stability used, and the stability of system tested by Lyapunov theory. The procedure can be summarised as follows.
1-
Two differential equations describe the circuit in the Figure 15 as follows:
d i L d t = 1 L [ d v i n v o ]
d v c d t = 1 C [ i L v o R P v o ] .
2-
The paper authors in [47] suggested the change of variables:
x 1 = i L v o R P v o
x 2 = v o V o R E F ,
Where VoREF is the reference value for the output voltage of the buck converter.
3-
Rewrite the equations to result in:
x . 1 = d v i n L x 2 + V o R E F L x 1 R C P x 1 C ( x 2 + V o R E F )
x . 2 = x 1 C .
4-
Then the following equations were used to cancel out the output nonlinearity in Step 3:
d v i n L = k 1 x 1 k 2 x 2 P . x 1 C ( x 2 V o R E F ) + ω   and   ω = V o R E F L ,
Where k1, k2, and P ˙ are parameters of the controller to be designed.
5-
The equations in Step 4 can be rewritten as
x . = ( k 1 1 R C ) x 1 + ( k 2 1 L ) x 2 + x 1 ( x 2 + V o R E F ) 2 ( P P . )
x . 2 = x 1 C .
If P = P ˙ then the system is linear and k1, k2 can be manipulated to put the poles of the system in their proper locations to get a stable system.
In [52] an improvement mothed of feedback linearization [47] cancels the nonlinearity of the system by adding an extra feedback loop that has optimum factor which is named feedback gain ( K F B = ( V T r P ^ L ^ ) / V _ i n ) in Figure 16. This factor is chosen such that P ^ and L ^ are equal to P and L, respectively.
Feedback linearization ensures large signal stability and an unlimited value of CPL; however, the drawbacks are low performance and speed [2,25].

5. Conclusions

Negative incremental impedance of a constant power load makes a system undergo negative damping and oscillation when a small variation occurs in the load. This phenomenon subjected parts of the μgrid (converters, switches, etc.) to stress and caused voltage collapse or damage to parts of the μgrid, which might have induced failure.
In this paper we introduce compensation methods that try to make the system stable when it has a constant power load. Many of these methods are aimed at redesigning the feedback of source converter such as feedback linearization, sliding mode control, pulse adjustment control technique, and state pole placement. These have the advantage of not having any effect on the load performance. Other methods were achieved by inserting an auxiliary circuit or power buffer between the source converter and the load converter. However, the auxiliary circuit increases the costs and complexity of the system, and might behave as another CPL in the system.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed for bringing the manuscript in its current state. Their contributions include detailed survey of the literatures and state of art which were essential for the completion of this review paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. Typical hybrid μgrid configurations.
Figure 1. Typical hybrid μgrid configurations.
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Figure 2. DC-DC converter with resistive load behaves as a constant power load (CPL).
Figure 2. DC-DC converter with resistive load behaves as a constant power load (CPL).
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Figure 3. V–I curve of load converter.
Figure 3. V–I curve of load converter.
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Figure 4. DC-AC inverter that presents a constant power load characteristic.
Figure 4. DC-AC inverter that presents a constant power load characteristic.
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Figure 5. Negative impedance behaviour of constant power loads.
Figure 5. Negative impedance behaviour of constant power loads.
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Figure 6. A constant power load parallel with a capacitor.
Figure 6. A constant power load parallel with a capacitor.
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Figure 7. Passive damping techniques: (a) RC parallel damping; (b) RL parallel damping; (c) RL series damping.
Figure 7. Passive damping techniques: (a) RC parallel damping; (b) RL parallel damping; (c) RL series damping.
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Figure 8. The proposed active-damping method based on adding virtual resistance: (a) [45]; (b) [64].
Figure 8. The proposed active-damping method based on adding virtual resistance: (a) [45]; (b) [64].
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Figure 9. Negative input-resistance compensator of motor drive.
Figure 9. Negative input-resistance compensator of motor drive.
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Figure 10. Pole placement control.
Figure 10. Pole placement control.
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Figure 11. Block diagram of the pulse adjustment control technique.
Figure 11. Block diagram of the pulse adjustment control technique.
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Figure 12. DC-DC Buck converter feeding CPL.
Figure 12. DC-DC Buck converter feeding CPL.
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Figure 13. Sliding mode control with CPL (a) ref. [77]; (b) ref. [57].
Figure 13. Sliding mode control with CPL (a) ref. [77]; (b) ref. [57].
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Figure 14. Model predictive control with power buffer.
Figure 14. Model predictive control with power buffer.
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Figure 15. DC-DC buck converter feeding CPL and constant voltage load (CVL).
Figure 15. DC-DC buck converter feeding CPL and constant voltage load (CVL).
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Figure 16. Feedback linearization of buck converter in [52].
Figure 16. Feedback linearization of buck converter in [52].
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AL-Nussairi, M.K.; Bayindir, R.; Padmanaban, S.; Mihet-Popa, L.; Siano, P. Constant Power Loads (CPL) with Microgrids: Problem Definition, Stability Analysis and Compensation Techniques. Energies 2017, 10, 1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/en10101656

AMA Style

AL-Nussairi MK, Bayindir R, Padmanaban S, Mihet-Popa L, Siano P. Constant Power Loads (CPL) with Microgrids: Problem Definition, Stability Analysis and Compensation Techniques. Energies. 2017; 10(10):1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/en10101656

Chicago/Turabian Style

AL-Nussairi, Mohammed Kh., Ramazan Bayindir, Sanjeevikumar Padmanaban, Lucian Mihet-Popa, and Pierluigi Siano. 2017. "Constant Power Loads (CPL) with Microgrids: Problem Definition, Stability Analysis and Compensation Techniques" Energies 10, no. 10: 1656. https://doi.org/10.3390/en10101656

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