IIC Journal of Innovation 5th Edition | Page 39

Outcomes, Insights, and Best Practices from IIC Testbeds: Microgrid Testbed Simulations because of their inherent speed and synchronization ability combined with being programmable (especially helpful in a testbed). Whether using CompactRIO or a custom-built controller, FPGAs are, at the low level, the technology of choice for IGBT control. The team can run simulated generation profiles on each of the three inverter cabinets to simulate solar, wind and storage. The team discussed using real solar, wind and storage – a possible plan for the future but the simulations make it easier to model multiple scenarios. For example, wind is very dynamic. Literally, one second could generate large output from the wind turbine or wind farm, then five seconds later there is next to nothing because that was a wind gust. These are the types of profiles that are very difficult to control because they happen so fast. From a TSN standpoint, the Microgrid Testbed can synchronize pulses between the controllers on the order of 100- nanoseconds. Both of those technologies (programmable FPGAs and TSN) are very well positioned to help solve the microgrid problems, certainly relative to dynamic control and device-to-device communication. However, the effort is focused on the reality that this is a new standard, a new protocol. Traditionally, the edge sensors send data back to a cloud or to a central distribution management or energy management system. That round trip from sensor back to control action can take longer than the wind gust. So by pushing control down to the edge, connecting it with surrounding sensors and other protection and control devices, the testbed team can coordinate much faster, response times. Again, this would not be a problem if wind/solar were a small percentage of the grid because the inertia of the grid would simply absorb it into unperceivable perturbations. Expanding Into Larger Field Deployment There are additional concerns around distance as the testbed moves into a larger field deployment and the need arises to ensure synchronous coordination across a larger space. The problem gets more complex with scale because, at some point there is a need to physically run a cable to different locations. The TSN protocol is designed to work at those great distances. So, the problem emerges not from a technology standpoint, but more from an infrastructure standpoint. As all the different parts are networked around the city and country, all the switches and nodes must be TSN-compliant along the path. This rollout may look like the transition from 100Mbit Ethernet to 1Gb Ethernet. Speed Grids around the world operate at 50 Hz or 60 Hz (cycles per second). These are standards – such as VHS/Betamax, HD- DVD/BlueRay – except there was no clear winner even though they exist in the same global industry, albeit typically continents apart. In a microgrid, many times – such as the remote village application or the foreign operating base examples mentioned earlier – all of the control equipment could be in a single substation. A substation could be a building. It could be a big building or it could There are multiple switches (IGBTs), inside this inverter and they must be articulated at the right time to get the proper frequency output. FPGAs are great for IGBT control IIC Journal of Innovation - 37 -