To address voltage unbalance induced by three-phase load discrepancies in rural areas, this paper proposes a voltage compensation technology utilising hybrid photovoltaic-energy storage (PV-ESS) inverters.Data analysis from 12 typical distribution stations indicates an average three-phase load unbalance of 18.7% and a maximum phase-voltage deviation of 7.2%, contributing to a 35% rise in user-side equipment failure rates.The study employs a collaborative PV-ESS control strategy that dynamically modulates inverter output by monitoring three-phase currents alongside real-time active and reactive power.A three-month pilot verification involving 500 households in a distribution area demonstrated that voltage unbalance dropped from 15.3% to 2.1%, the power factor improved from 0.82 to 0.96, line losses decreased by 12.8%, and the user-side voltage compliance rate rose from 92.1% to 98.7%.Through optimised charge-discharge strategies, the technology achieves a PV self-consumption rate exceeding 85%, effectively mitigating heavy loads on distribution transformers.This study provides a quantifiable technical solution for rural grid voltage regulation, with empirical data validating its significant compensation efficacy.
Chen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.