DVR Simulation

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Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and

Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441

Simulation of Dynamic Voltage Restorer Using Matlab to


Enhance Power Quality in Distribution System
Priyanka Kumari1, Vijay Kumar Garg2
M.tech student U.I.E.T, kurukshetra
Asst. prof. in electrical dept. U.I.E.T, kurukshetra

ABSTRACT
Power quality is one of major concerns
in the present era. It has become important,
with the introduction of sophisticated devices,
whose performance is very sensitive to the
quality of power supply that results in a failure
of end user equipments. One of the major
problems dealt here is the voltage sag.
To
solve this problem, custom power devices are
used. One of those devices is the Dynamic
Voltage Restorer (DVR), which is the most
efficient and effective modern custom power
device used in power distribution networks. Its
appeal includes lower cost, smaller size, and its
fast dynamic response to the disturbance. It can
provide the most commercial solution to
mitigation voltage sag by injecting voltage as
well as power into the system. This paper
presents modeling, analysis and simulation of a
Dynamic Voltage Restorer (DVR) using
MATLAB. The efficiency of the DVR depends
on the performance of the efficiency control
technique involved in switching the inverters. In
this model a PI controller and Discrete PWM
pulse generator is used.

I.

INTRODUCTION

Power quality is the delivery of


sufficiently high grade electrical services to the
customer. A power quality problem is an
occurrence manifested as a non-standard voltage,
current or frequency that results in failure or misoperation of end user equipments. Power
distribution systems, ideally should provide
customer with an uninterrupted flow of energy at
smooth sinusoidal voltage at the contracted
magnitude level and frequency [1], but in practice
distribution systems, have nonlinear loads, which
affects the purity of waveform of supply. A
momentary disturbance for sensitive electronic
devices causes voltage reduction at load end
leading to frequency deviations which results in
interrupted power flow, scrambled data,
unexpected plant shutdowns and equipment failure.
Some events both usual (e.g. Capacitor switching,
motor starting) and unusual (E.g. Faults) could also
inflict power quality problems [5]. Under heavy
load conditions, a significant voltage drop may
occur in the system. A dip is usually taken as an

event lasting less than one minute when voltage


decreases to between 0.1 and 0.9 p.u. (dip greater
than 0.1 p.u. is usually treated as an interruption) or
a Voltage sag can occur at any instant of time, with
amplitudes ranging from 10-90 % and a duration
lasting for half cycle to one minute [2].
Power quality in the distribution system can be
improved by using DVR, as assures pre-specified
quality and reliability of supply. This pre-specified
quality may contain a combination of specification
of following: low phase unbalance, low harmonic
distortion in load voltage, no power interruptions,
acceptance of fluctuations, and poor power factor
loads without significant effect on the terminal
voltage, low flicker at the load voltage, magnitude
and duration of overvoltage and under-voltage
within specified limits [6].
DYNAMIC VOLTAGE RESTORER (DVR)
DVR is a series connected solid state
device that is used for mitigating voltage
disturbances in the distribution system by injecting
voltage into the system in order to regulate the load
side voltage [9]. DVR maintains the load voltage
at a nominal magnitude and phase by compensating
the voltage sag/swell, voltage unbalance and
voltage harmonics presented at the point of
common coupling [10, 11, 12]. The DVR is a series
conditioner based on a pulse width modulated
voltage source inverter, which is generating or
absorbing real or reactive power independently.

Fig.1.conventional circuit configuration of the


DVR [14].
It is normally installed in a distribution
system between supply and critical load feeder [4].
These systems are able to compensate voltage sags
by increasing the appropriate voltages in series
with the supply voltage, and therefore avoid a loss
of power. Voltage sags caused by unsymmetrical

1436 | P a g e

Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and
Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441
line-to line, line to ground, double-line-to-ground
and symmetrical three phase faults is affected to
sensitive loads, the DVR injects the independent
voltages to restore and maintained sensitive to its
nominal value. Its primary function is to rapidly
boost up the load side voltage in the event of a
disturbance in order to avoid any power disruption
to load [3, 7].
The basic components of a DVR:
DVR can be applied for medium voltage
[13, 14] and in low voltage application [15]. The
DVR components have been discussed in [16, 17].
Figure 1 shows conventional circuit configuration
of the DVR. DVR basically consists of [21, 18, 19,
22, and 20] following parts:
Series
Voltage
Injection/booster
Transformers:
The
injection/booster
transformer limits coupling of noise and
transient energy from primary to secondary
side [23]. Generally High voltage side of the
injection transformer is connected in series to
the distribution system and the power circuit of
the DVR can be connected at the low voltage
side. Its main function are: connects DVR to
the distribution system through HV-winding
and transforms and couples the injected
compensating voltages generated by VSC to
incoming supply voltage, to increase the
voltage supplied by the filtered VSI output to
the desired level while isolating the load from
the system (VSC and control mechanism).The
transformer winding ratio is pre-determined
according to the voltage required at the
secondary side of the transformer basically it is
kept equal to supply voltage to allow DVR to
compensate for full voltage sag. A higher
transformer winding ratio will increase the
primary side current, which will adversely
affect the performance of the power electronic
devices connected in the VSI [24].
Voltage Source Inverter (VSI): A VSC is power
electronic system consists of a storage device and
switching devices. It generates a sinusoidal voltage
at any required frequency, magnitude, and phase
angle. The function of an inverter system in DVR is
used to convert the DC voltage supplied by the
energy storage device into an AC voltage [29] and
to temporarily replace the supply voltage or to
generate part of supply voltage which is missing
[26].
Passive Filters: In DVR, filters convert the
inverted PWM waveform into a sinusoidal
waveform, by eliminating the unwanted
harmonic components generated by the VSI
action [25].
DC charging circuit: The dc charging circuit
has two main functions: The first is to charge
the energy source after a sag compensation

event and second is to maintain dc link voltage


at the nominal dc link voltage. To charge the
dc-link various topologies are used such as an
external power supply or by connecting the dc
side of the DVR to the controlled or
uncontrolled rectifier to maintain the dc
voltage. The other side of the rectifier can be
from a main power line or from an auxiliary
feeder
Control and Protection: The control process
generally consists of hardware with
programmable logic. In past it consists of
Digital Signal Processing boards which
provide controls like detection and correction.
Filters can also be used. There are different
types of filter algorithm: Fourier Transform
(FT), Phase-Locked Loop (PLL), and Wavelet
Transform (WT), out of which Fourier
Transform is the most common type. Direct
feed forward type control architecture
maximizes dynamic performance of DVR and
compensation of voltage sags can be achieved
in a fast response time (approximately 1ms)
[27,28].

II.

OPERATING PRINCIPLE OF
DVR

The basic function of the DVR is to inject


a dynamically controlled voltage VDVR generated
by a forced commutated converter in series to the
bus voltage by means of a booster transformer. The
momentary amplitudes of the three injected phase
voltages are controlled such As to eliminate any
effects of a bus fault to the load voltage.
The DVR has three modes of operation which are:
protection mode, standby mode, injection/boost
mode.
Protection Mode :If the over current on the
load side exceeds a permissible limit due to
short circuit on the load or large inrush current,
the DVR will be isolated from the systems by
using the bypass switches (S2 and S3 will
open) and supplying another path for current
(S1 will be closed).

Fig 2: Protection mode


Standby mode: (VDVR= 0)
In the standby mode the booster transformers low
voltage winding is shorted through the converter.

1437 | P a g e

Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and
Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441
No switching of semiconductors occurs in this
mode of operation and the full load current will
pass through the primary

magnitude [18, 32]. This method can be shown in


Figure.7 [30].

Fig 3 Standby mode


Fig.5. InPhase compensation

Injection/Boost Mode: (VDVR>0)


In the Injection/Boost mode the DVR is
injecting a compensating voltage through the
booster transformer due to the detection of a
disturbance in the supply voltage.
COMPENSATION TECHNIQUES IN DVR:
Concept of compensation techniques
which are applied in DVR can be divided into
categories as follows;

(c).Phase Advanced or Minimum Energy


Compensation:
This method reduces the energy storage
size. Active power PDVR depends on the angle .
During the sag, phase of load voltage jumps a
certain step that causes difficulties for load [18, 32,
and 33]. The magnitude of the restored load voltage
that is maintained at pre-fault condition is shown in
fig.8. [5].

(a).Pre-Sag Compensation:
In this method it is important for both
magnitude and the phase angle to be compensated.
The difference during sag and pre-sag voltage are
detected by DVR and it injects the detected
voltage, hence phase and amplitude of the voltage
before the sag has to be exactly restored [16, 18].
Figure.6 shows the pre-sag compensation technique
before and after the voltage sags. [30, 32].

Fig.6. Phase advanced compensation

III.

Fig.4. Pre-sag compensation


(b).In- Phase Compensation:
In this method, injection voltage is in
phase with the source voltage [31]. When the
source voltage is drop due to sag in the distribution
network, then injection voltage produced by the
Voltage Source Inverter (VSI) will inject the
missing voltage according to voltage drop

SIMULATIONS AND RESULTS

MATLAB Simulink /power system block


set (PSB) will be used in this work to perform the
simulation. One of the major problems dealt here is
the power sag. A DVR is connected to the system
through a series transformer with a capability to
insert a maximum voltage of 50% of the phase to
ground system voltage and a series filter is also
used to remove any high frequency components.
The role of DVR to compensate load voltage is
investigated during the different fault conditions
like voltage sag, single phase to ground, double
phase to ground faults. The aim of the control
scheme is to maintain a constant voltage magnitude
at the sensitive load point, under the system
disturbance. In order to mitigate the simulated
voltage sags in the test system of each
compensation control scheme is implemented.

1438 | P a g e

Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and
Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441
The control system only measures the rms
voltage at load point. Voltage sag is created at load
terminals by a three-phase fault. Load voltage is
sensed and passed through a sequence analyzer.
The magnitude is compared with reference voltage
(Vref). Pulse width modulated (PWM) control
technique is applied for inverter switching so as to
produce a three phase 50 Hz sinusoidal voltage at
the load terminals. The IGBT inverter is controlled
with PI controller. PI controller input is an
actuating signal which is the difference between the
Vref and Vin. PI controller based on the feed
forward technique processes the error signal
(difference between the reference voltage and
actual measured voltage) and generates the angle
to trigger the switches of an inverter using a Pulse
Width Modulation (PWM) scheme to drive the
error to zero. The proposed DVR utilizes energy
drawn from the supply line source during normal
operation and stored in capacitors and which is
converted to an adjustable three phase ac voltage
suitable for mitigation of voltage sags.
Output of the controller block is of the
form of an angle , which introduces additional
phase-lag/lead in the three-phase voltages. The
output of error detector is Vref - Vin. An advantage
of a proportional plus integral controller is that its
integral term causes the steady-state error to be
zero for a step input.
In this simulation the In-Phase Compensation (IPC)
method is used. As it can be seen from the results,
the DVR is able to produce the required voltage
components for different phases rapidly and help to
maintain a balanced and constant load voltage at
the nominal value (400 V).

phase-240 V, line impedance Ls-0.005 H,Rs-0.001


ohm, series transformer turns ratio- 1:1, DC bus
voltage-640V, filter inductance- 1 mH, filter
capacitance- 1 microfarad, load resistance-47 ohm,
load inductance- 60mH, line frequency-50 Hz,
isolation transformer 5 KVA and its line to line
voltage-VL-L-415 Vrms. In this model a Delta-Wye
step-down transformer with neutral grounded is
used therefore zero sequence current will not
propgate through transformer when fault occur on
high voltage side, and third harmonic voltages are
eliminated by circulation of harmonic current
trapped in the primary delta winding.
In the fig.8 red wave shows load voltage, black
shows supply voltage, while blue shows injection
voltage.

Fig.8.Simulation result supply voltage, injection


voltage and load voltage
in the fig.9. voltage sag after fault is removed using
DVR

Fig.9.phase phase, three-phase Va,Vb,Vc and p.u.


voltages at load

IV.

Fig.7.System with DVR and fault


A simulation model has been developed in
MATLAB/SIMULINK as shown in fig.7 . The
simulation parameters are: main supply voltage per

CONCLUSION

This paper represents simulation of DVR


in MATLAB. In order to show the performance of
DVR in mitigation of voltage sags, s simple
distribution network is simulated using MATLAB.
A DVR is connected to a system through a series
transformer with a capability to insert a maximum
voltage of 50% of phase to ground system voltage.
In-phase compensation method is used. DVR
injects the appropriate voltage component to
correct rapidly any deviation in the supply voltage

1439 | P a g e

Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and
Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441
to keep the load voltage constant at the nominal
value and handles both balanced and unbalanced
situations without any difficulties. The main
advantages of the proposed DVR are simple
control, fast response and low cost. The proposed
PWM control scheme using PI controller is
efficient in providing the voltage sag
compensation. As opposed to fundamental
frequency switching schemes already available in
the MATLAB/SIMULINK, this PWM control
scheme only requires voltage measurements. This
characteristic makes it ideally suitable for lowvoltage custom power applications. The main
shortcoming of the DVR, being a series device, is
its inability to mitigate complete interruptions.

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Priyanka Kumari, Vijay Kumar Garg / International Journal of Engineering Research and
Applications (IJERA)
ISSN: 2248-9622 www.ijera.com
Vol. 3, Issue 4, Jul-Aug 2013, pp.1436-1441
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