To improve the dynamic response and steady-state frequency quality of a wind–storage coordinated system during primary frequency regulation, and to address the secondary frequency dip caused by rotor kinetic energy recovery when a doubly fed induction generator (DFIG)-based wind turbine (DFIG-WT) participates in frequency support, this paper proposes a coordinated wind–storage primary frequency regulation strategy. This strategy synergistically controls the wind turbine’s rotor kinetic energy recovery and exploits the advantages of hybrid energy storage system (HESS). During the DFIG-WT control stage, an adaptive weighted model is developed for the inertial and droop power contributions of the DFIG-WT based on the available rotor kinetic energy, enabling a rational distribution of primary frequency regulation power. In the control segment of HESS, an adaptive complementary filtering frequency division strategy is proposed. This approach integrates an adaptive adjustment method based on state of charge (SOC) to control both the battery energy storage system (BESS) and supercapacitor (SC). Additionally, the BESS assists in completing the rotor kinetic energy recovery process. Through simulation experiments, the results demonstrate that under operating conditions of 9 m/s wind speed and a 30 MW step disturbance, the proposed adaptive weight integrated inertia control elevates the frequency nadir to 49.84 Hz and reduces the secondary frequency dip to 0.0035 Hz. Under the control strategy where wind and storage coordinated participate in frequency regulation and BESS assist in rotor kinetic energy recovery, secondary frequency dips were eliminated, with steady-state frequency rising to 49.941 Hz. The applicability of this strategy was further validated under higher wind speeds and larger disturbance conditions.
Zhao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.