dzt
Electrical
- Nov 29, 2014
- 14
Hi,
I am researching information to understand better DC microgrids, and at the moment I am reading on different control techniques to control different converters (Buck, Boost, Buck-Boost etc) within the DC microgrid. One method to control a converter within the dc microgrid is Droop control operating over inner loops of voltage and current control. Droop control is used to provide load sharing between the converters connected to the common dc microgrid bus, by varying the reference voltage of the voltage controller. The control system is shown in the figure below.
I am finding a problem to understand why precisely is the current control needed. Would not inner voltage control alone and outer Droop control suffice to control the converter?
There is a lot of literature on Droop control on the internet but I did not manage to find a direct explanation on the current controller. Any help would be appreciated.
I am researching information to understand better DC microgrids, and at the moment I am reading on different control techniques to control different converters (Buck, Boost, Buck-Boost etc) within the DC microgrid. One method to control a converter within the dc microgrid is Droop control operating over inner loops of voltage and current control. Droop control is used to provide load sharing between the converters connected to the common dc microgrid bus, by varying the reference voltage of the voltage controller. The control system is shown in the figure below.
I am finding a problem to understand why precisely is the current control needed. Would not inner voltage control alone and outer Droop control suffice to control the converter?
There is a lot of literature on Droop control on the internet but I did not manage to find a direct explanation on the current controller. Any help would be appreciated.