An adaptive fractional controller design for automatic voltage regulator system: sigmoid-based fractional-order PID controller
Neural Computing and Applications, ISSN: 1433-3058, Vol: 36, Issue: 23, Page: 14409-14431
2024
- 9Citations
- 20Captures
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Article Description
The primary objective of a power system is to provide safe and reliable electrical energy to consumers. This objective is achieved by maintaining the stability of the power system, a multifaceted concept that can be divided into three distinct classes. The focus of this study is on one of these classes, voltage stability. A critical component in maintaining voltage stability is the automatic voltage regulator (AVR) system of synchronous generators. In this paper, a novel control method, the sigmoid-based fractional-order PID (SFOPID), is introduced with the aim of improving the dynamic response and the robustness of the AVR system. The dandelion optimizer (DO), a successful optimization algorithm, is used to optimize the parameters of the proposed SFOPID control strategy. The optimization process for the DO-SFOPID control strategy includes a variety of objective functions, including error-based metrics such as integral of absolute error, integral of squared error, integral of time absolute error, and integral of time squared error, in addition to the user-defined Zwee Lee Gaing’s metric. The effectiveness of the DO-SFOPID control technique on the AVR system has been rigorously investigated through a series of tests and analyses, including aspects such as time domain, robustness, frequency domain, and evaluation of nonlinearity effects. The simulation results are compared between the proposed DO-SFOPID control technique and the fractional-order PID (FOPID) and sigmoid-based PID (SPID) control techniques, both of which have been tuned using different metaheuristic algorithms that have gained significant recognition in recent years. As a result of these comparative analyses, the superiority of the DO-SFOPID control technique is confirmed as it shows an improved performance with respect to the other control techniques. Furthermore, the performance of the proposed DO-SFOPID control technique is validated within an experimental setup for the AVR system. The simulation results show that the proposed DO-SFOPID control technique is highly successful in terms of stability and robustness. In summary, this study provides comprehensive evidence supporting the effectiveness and superiority of the DO-SFOPID control technique on the AVR system through both simulation and experimental results.
Bibliographic Details
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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