Electrical distributors in Australia are experiencing high penetration levels of small scale distributed generation, such as solar photovoltaic systems, particularly being installed on houses that are connected to the Low Voltage network. Distributed generation is challenging the traditional operating paradigm and can result in occurrences of voltage rising to the point where it goes above safe limits, or result in the inverter energy systems continuously "tripping" and being unable to generate. Reactive power functionality in inverters provides a means to effectively reduce the amount of attributed voltage rise on the network, ultimately allowing more and larger inverters to be connected to the grid while ensuring the network remains within a safe voltage range. This paper presents the results of Ergon Energy's detailed investigation into the application of inverter reactive power functionality through a desktop study, modelling, laboratory testing and field trials. This study confirmed the theory that customer owned inverters with reactive power functionality can be utilized to overcome or prevent voltage rise issues on the electricity network.
[1]
Frank Marten,et al.
Improved low voltage grid-integration of photovoltaic systems in Germany
,
2013,
2013 IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting.
[2]
Rolf Witzmann,et al.
Voltage limitation by autonomous reactive power control of grid connected photovoltaic inverters
,
2009,
2009 Compatibility and Power Electronics.
[3]
B. Ernst,et al.
Grid integration of distributed PV-generation
,
2012,
2012 IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting.
[4]
P. Rodriguez,et al.
Local Reactive Power Control Methods for Overvoltage Prevention of Distributed Solar Inverters in Low-Voltage Grids
,
2011,
IEEE Journal of Photovoltaics.