With the increasing integration of renewable energy into power grids, voltage source converter-based high-voltage direct current (VSC-HVDC) stations often adopt hybrid grid-following (GFL) and grid-forming (GFM) control strategies to improve adaptability to varying grid strengths. In many existing schemes, the hybrid coefficient changes abruptly, which may produce large transient current overshoots and compromise the safe and stable operation of converters. An adaptive hybrid GFL-GFM control framework equipped with a hybrid coefficient transition regulation is proposed. Small-signal state–space models are established and eigenvalue analysis confirms stability over the considered short-circuit ratio (SCR) range. The regulating method is activated only during coefficient transitions and is inactive in steady-state, thereby preserving the operating-point eigenvalue properties. Dynamic equations of the converter current change rate are derived to reveal the key role of the hybrid-coefficient change rate in driving transient current overshoots, based on which a real-time hybrid coefficient regulating method is developed to shape coefficient transitions. Simulations on a 500 kV/2100 MW VSC-HVDC project demonstrate reduced transient current overshoot and power oscillations during SCR variations, with robustness under moderate parameter deviations as well as representative SCR assessment error and update delay.
Chao et al. (Wed,) studied this question.