IIC Journal of Innovation 5th Edition | Page 38

Outcomes, Insights, and Best Practices from IIC Testbeds: Microgrid Testbed R ESULTS to as the point of common coupling. Many companies are putting work into testbeds and they get to learn about adjacent technologies. This in turn makes vendors better suited to deliver technology components that can fit into a complete solution. For the eventual end user, the testbeds are reducing integration risk and speeding time-to-market for many of these technologies – helping to drive business results through innovation. The next three cabinets are the testbed’s inverter cabinets. They have a 50-kilowatt power stack from a company called SEMIKRON®. These are grid-scale components though they are not pushing 50 kilowatts through them. Real equipment is closer to grid ready and is important for both development and demonstration to utility professionals. Those power stacks are controlled by a CompactRIO edge controller from National Instruments. Because that specific model of CompactRIO has TSN capability, the testbed team can synchronize the control routines across the three cabinets. The controllers have an Intel® multi-core Atom processor and a Xilinx® field-programmable gate array (FPGA) that form the processing base for the control algorithm. Lab Environment In the lab, the testbed team can run a functioning, low-voltage (for safety) grid that can disconnect from the local three-phase power outlet of the grid and run in island mode with no synchronous generation. That scenario is using the TSN technology, but it also requires some control theory. Specific resources, as mentioned earlier, are needed here. Some of the in-house expertise includes people who have worked on control algorithms to run inverter controls, running the insulated-gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) that are part of an inverter and synchronizing with the adjacent inverters. The final cabinet in the row of five is the “load cabinet.” A microgrid requires load and this cabinet was built to automatically or remotely control the basic types of loads: lights, a motor, resistive heaters, etc. The testbed has all of those in the load cabinet to be switched on or off as needed. The testbed team worked with an integration partner, Viewpoint Systems, to build out what the team refers to as the five “core cabinets.” These cabinets are somewhat portable and contain instrumentation for microgrid setup. Cisco switches connect all of the CompactRIOs in all of the cabinets together. TSN systems need compatible edge nodes and IT infrastructure to work. It is easy to talk about interoperability and being able to have plug-and-play or interoperability messages, but like the earlier conversation about the network stack, it is not as easy as plugging a cable into Box A and into Box B and then they can talk. There are so many layers of technologies involved that even experts on the testbed are continuing to learn. The first in the line of daisy-chained cabinets is the “Main Grid” cabinet that connects to the 3-phase 208VAC in the lab and uses transformers to drop the voltage to a safer voltage below 24VAC. This cabinet also has a built in switch/relay that is used to connect or disconnect the microgrid from wall power. On an actual microgrid connected to a controlled network, this would be referred - 36 - September 2017