Litcius/Paper detail

Distributed Event-Triggered Consensus-Based Control of DC Microgrids in Presence of DoS Cyber Attacks

Mina Mola, Nader Meskin, K. Khorasani, Ahmed Massoud

2021IEEE Access26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this paper, the problem of distributed event-based control of large scale power systems in presence of denial-of-service (DoS) cyber attacks is addressed. Towards this end, a direct current (DC) microgrid composed of multiple interconnected distributed generation units (DGUs) is considered. Voltage stability is guaranteed by utilizing decentralized local controllers for each DGU. A distributed discrete-time event-triggered (ET) consensus-based control strategy is then designed for current sharing in the DGUs. Through this mechanism, transmissions occur while a specified event is triggered to prevent unessential utilization of communication resources. The asymptotic stability of the ET-based controller is shown formally by using Lyapunov stability via linear matrix inequality (LMI) conditions. The behavior of the DGUs subject to DoS cyber attacks are also investigated and sufficient conditions for secure current sharing are obtained. Towards this end, a switching framework is considered between the communication and attack intervals in order to derive sufficient conditions on frequency and duration of DoS cyber attacks to reach the secure current sharing. The validity and capabilities of the presented approach is confirmed through a simulation case study.

Topics & Concepts

Denial-of-service attackMicrogridComputer scienceControl theory (sociology)Linear matrix inequalityController (irrigation)Decentralised systemEvent (particle physics)Distributed computingControl (management)The InternetMathematical optimizationMathematicsArtificial intelligenceQuantum mechanicsBiologyPhysicsAgronomyWorld Wide WebMicrogrid Control and OptimizationSmart Grid Security and ResilienceSmart Grid Energy Management