Litcius/Paper detail

Grid-Forming Wind: Getting ready for prime time, with or without inverters

Vahan Gevorgian, Shahil Shah, Weihang Yan, Geoff Henderson

2022IEEE Electrification Magazine19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Variable wind power is one of the fastest-growing energy-generation technologies, harnessing the energy of wind, both on land and at sea. During the past decade, the global share of wind power has grown tremendously, and wind power is evolving into a major contributor to electricity supplies in many countries. In this journey, wind is also becoming a source of reliability services to the grid, which has required grid-supporting functions originally provided by synchronous generators, enabling very high levels of instantaneous penetration (ranging from 60 to 70% in some power systems). To get beyond this, a fundamental shift is required to address challenges associated with the transition to a grid with only a few remaining (or even without any) conventional synchronous generators while achieving a minimum acceptable level of stability.

Topics & Concepts

Wind powerGridRenewable energyVariable renewable energyIntermittent energy sourceElectricityDistributed generationElectrical engineeringComputer scienceElectric power systemTelecommunicationsEngineeringPower (physics)GeographyPhysicsGeodesyQuantum mechanicsMicrogrid Control and OptimizationIslanding Detection in Power SystemsWind Turbine Control Systems