In this paper, frequency control of shipboard microgrids is achieved in the presence of measurement noise, dynamic uncertainty, and actuator faults. Measurement noise arises from incorrect signal processing, electromagnetic interference, converter switching dynamics, mechanical vibrations from propulsion and generators, and transients caused by sudden changes in load or generation. Actuator faults are caused by intense mechanical vibrations, temperature-induced stress, degradation of power electronic devices, communication latency, and wear or saturation in fuel injection and governor components. To regulate the frequency deviation under these challenges, a cross-entropy-based fault-tolerant model predictive control method, utilizing a discrete-time linear Kalman filter, is developed. Firstly, the discrete-time linear Kalman filter ensures that uncertain states of the shipboard microgrids are measurable in a noisy environment. Afterward, the model predictive control scheme is employed to obtain an optimal control input based on the measurable states. This controller ensures the frequency regulation of shipboard microgrids in the presence of measurement noise. Furthermore, a fault-tolerant control technique that utilizes the concept of cross-entropy is extended to provide a robust controller that verifies the frequency regulation of shipboard microgrids with actuator faults. To demonstrate the stability of the closed-loop system of the shipboard microgrids based on the proposed controller, considering the effects of measurement noise, state uncertainty, and actuator faults, the Lyapunov stability concept is employed. Finally, simulation results in MATLAB/Simulink R2025b are provided to show that the proposed control method for frequency regulation in renewable shipboard microgrids is both effective and practicable.
Mofid et al. (Thu,) studied this question.