The global shift toward decentralized generation has established standalone energy supply systems as a vital solution for remote regions. However, the integration of intermittent renewable sources and the inherent lack of rotational inertia in power electronic interfaces create significant challenges for frequency stability. This study addresses these issues by introducing an original Two-Tier Fractional-Order PID (TTFOPID) controller designed for robust Load Frequency Control (LFC) in a hybrid system comprising solar, diesel, biodiesel, and battery energy storage (BESS). The research utilizes the Multi-Objective Imperialist Competitive Algorithm (MOICA), enhanced with an attractive and repulsive assimilation phase, to navigate the high-dimensional parameter space. A unique framework is established to simultaneously tune controller gains and high-level system parameters, specifically BESS sizing and droop settings. Results demonstrate that the MOICA-tuned TTFOPID provides superior performance, achieving a 72% improvement in the Integral of Time-Weighted Absolute Error (ITAE) compared to NSGA-II and a 56% improvement in the Integral of the Square of Control (ISC) compared to MOPSO. Furthermore, robustness analysis validates the controller’s stability against significant parametric variations. The study concludes that the integrated TTFOPID-MOICA approach provides a superior pathway for stabilizing autonomous energy supply systems while protecting hardware longevity through optimized control effort.
Nejlaoui et al. (Wed,) studied this question.