Distributed Event-Triggered Current Sharing Consensus-Based Adaptive Droop Control of DC Microgrid
Jinhui Zeng, T. C. Liu, Chengjie Xu, Zhifeng Sun
Abstract
Conventional droop control (a decentralized method to regulate power sharing by adjusting voltage–current slopes) in DC microgrids faces challenges in balancing precise current distribution, bus voltage regulation, and communication pressure, especially in distributed energy management scenarios. To address these limitations, this paper proposes an adaptive control strategy combining three layers: (1) Primary control achieves power sharing and voltage stabilization via U-I droop characteristics for distributed energy resources (DERs); (2) Secondary control corrects voltage deviations and droop coefficient imbalances through multi-agent consensus algorithms, ensuring global equilibrium; (3) Event-triggered consensus control minimizes communication pressure via a novel protocol with time-varying coupling weights and a hybrid trigger function combining state variables and time-decaying terms rigorously proven to exclude Zeno behavior (i.e., infinite triggering in finite time) using Lyapunov stability theory.