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I've been watching an ongoing argument between several guys with very different backgrounds, on US grid frequency control (in the ERCOT area) and I think all sides are saying the same thing. It's their terminology/slang that's not consistent. I really don't want to get involved with the fight, so I'll ask the question here.
Using my version of terminology/slang....
Who controls the frequency on a large grid?
On a small grid, the unit that is big enough and with a governor that's on Isochronous Control (with Proportional/Integral Control) directly controls frequency (generator speed). Right? Others share MW load using drooping governors (Proportional Control using frequency (speed) as the PV and being fed a setpoint by a PI controller that is responding to its MW error...MW setpoint minus the MW's actually being generated).
On a large grid, no single unit is big enough to maintain frequency (no Isochronous Unit), so that job is shared among all units that participate in (get paid for) frequency control. The primary control method is through the droop characteristics of the "sharing" governors (Proportional Control...droop...on speed, and PI control on MW load as described above). And, the secondary control method is the "frequency obligation" (in MW's) that is added into the MW setpoint signal that is fed into the participating Automatic Generation Control (AGC) systems. Right?
In the Mark V, the droop is in the 4% droop control loop (P Control). Right? The MW loop is in the External Mode (PI Control) loop that gets its MW setpoint from the AGC system. Right?
Thanks,
Bill
Using my version of terminology/slang....
Who controls the frequency on a large grid?
On a small grid, the unit that is big enough and with a governor that's on Isochronous Control (with Proportional/Integral Control) directly controls frequency (generator speed). Right? Others share MW load using drooping governors (Proportional Control using frequency (speed) as the PV and being fed a setpoint by a PI controller that is responding to its MW error...MW setpoint minus the MW's actually being generated).
On a large grid, no single unit is big enough to maintain frequency (no Isochronous Unit), so that job is shared among all units that participate in (get paid for) frequency control. The primary control method is through the droop characteristics of the "sharing" governors (Proportional Control...droop...on speed, and PI control on MW load as described above). And, the secondary control method is the "frequency obligation" (in MW's) that is added into the MW setpoint signal that is fed into the participating Automatic Generation Control (AGC) systems. Right?
In the Mark V, the droop is in the 4% droop control loop (P Control). Right? The MW loop is in the External Mode (PI Control) loop that gets its MW setpoint from the AGC system. Right?
Thanks,
Bill
