Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition

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Power systems are transforming with increasing levels of inverter-based resources (IBRs). This transformation requires critical roles of grid-forming (GFM) inverters replacing synchronous generators for bulk power system stabilization and ancillary services, also allowing flexible power system operation, such as microgrid that is operated by multiple GFM IBRs to achieve system resilience against contingencies. To realize the resilient power systems allowing flexible in-and-out operation of GFM IBRs potentially programmed with different primary controls, a synchronization method universally applicable, i.e., independent of control types, would be beneficial to ease the integration process, but it has not been actively studied. To fill the gap, this paper proposes a universal synchronization method that achieves a passive synchronization to enable a smooth transition in a grid with off-nominal system parameters, i.e., voltage and frequency. The logic proposed requires no modification on the primary control, thus applicable to any type of GFMs with a voltage reference input. To validate the concept, a simulation of an IEEE 13-bus benchmark system modified with 3 GFM inverters is presented. It simulates an inverter-driven black start scenario in which GFM inverters autonomously turn on and connect to the grid under heavy loading, using the synchronization logic. The case study demonstrates that GFM inverters can tune their voltage reference to smoothly synchronize without severe transients, and contribute to a seamless black start of the grid under unbalanced load conditions. Two GFM methods - Droop and dispatchable virtual oscillator control - are used for the demo to validate feasibility and interoperability of the passive synchronization.

Citation Formats

TY - DATA AB - Power systems are transforming with increasing levels of inverter-based resources (IBRs). This transformation requires critical roles of grid-forming (GFM) inverters replacing synchronous generators for bulk power system stabilization and ancillary services, also allowing flexible power system operation, such as microgrid that is operated by multiple GFM IBRs to achieve system resilience against contingencies. To realize the resilient power systems allowing flexible in-and-out operation of GFM IBRs potentially programmed with different primary controls, a synchronization method universally applicable, i.e., independent of control types, would be beneficial to ease the integration process, but it has not been actively studied. To fill the gap, this paper proposes a universal synchronization method that achieves a passive synchronization to enable a smooth transition in a grid with off-nominal system parameters, i.e., voltage and frequency. The logic proposed requires no modification on the primary control, thus applicable to any type of GFMs with a voltage reference input. To validate the concept, a simulation of an IEEE 13-bus benchmark system modified with 3 GFM inverters is presented. It simulates an inverter-driven black start scenario in which GFM inverters autonomously turn on and connect to the grid under heavy loading, using the synchronization logic. The case study demonstrates that GFM inverters can tune their voltage reference to smoothly synchronize without severe transients, and contribute to a seamless black start of the grid under unbalanced load conditions. Two GFM methods - Droop and dispatchable virtual oscillator control - are used for the demo to validate feasibility and interoperability of the passive synchronization. AU - Chang, Heather A2 - Baeckeland, Nathan A3 - Banerjee, Abhishek A4 - Seo, Gab-Su DB - C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange DP - Open EI | National Laboratory of the Rockies DO - 10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932 KW - Power electronics and inverters KW - Power electronics KW - Inverters KW - Battery energy storage KW - Solar KW - Photovoltaics KW - PV KW - Diesel generators KW - Other liquid-fuel generators KW - Power plant controls KW - SCADA KW - Standards KW - Interconnection KW - Protection KW - Case studies KW - Performance KW - Maintenance and operations KW - Operations KW - Maintenance KW - Commissioning LA - English DA - 2023/01/01 PY - 2023 PB - NLR T1 - Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition UR - https://doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932 ER -
Export Citation to RIS
Chang, Heather, et al. Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition. NLR, 1 January, 2023, C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932.
Chang, H., Baeckeland, N., Banerjee, A., & Seo, G. (2023). Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition. [Data set]. C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. NLR. https://doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932
Chang, Heather, Nathan Baeckeland, Abhishek Banerjee, and Gab-Su Seo. Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition. NLR, January, 1, 2023. Distributed by C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932
@misc{CMIX_Dataset_85, title = {Universal Passive Synchronization Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Without Mode Transition}, author = {Chang, Heather and Baeckeland, Nathan and Banerjee, Abhishek and Seo, Gab-Su}, abstractNote = {Power systems are transforming with increasing levels of inverter-based resources (IBRs). This transformation requires critical roles of grid-forming (GFM) inverters replacing synchronous generators for bulk power system stabilization and ancillary services, also allowing flexible power system operation, such as microgrid that is operated by multiple GFM IBRs to achieve system resilience against contingencies. To realize the resilient power systems allowing flexible in-and-out operation of GFM IBRs potentially programmed with different primary controls, a synchronization method universally applicable, i.e., independent of control types, would be beneficial to ease the integration process, but it has not been actively studied. To fill the gap, this paper proposes a universal synchronization method that achieves a passive synchronization to enable a smooth transition in a grid with off-nominal system parameters, i.e., voltage and frequency. The logic proposed requires no modification on the primary control, thus applicable to any type of GFMs with a voltage reference input. To validate the concept, a simulation of an IEEE 13-bus benchmark system modified with 3 GFM inverters is presented. It simulates an inverter-driven black start scenario in which GFM inverters autonomously turn on and connect to the grid under heavy loading, using the synchronization logic. The case study demonstrates that GFM inverters can tune their voltage reference to smoothly synchronize without severe transients, and contribute to a seamless black start of the grid under unbalanced load conditions. Two GFM methods - Droop and dispatchable virtual oscillator control - are used for the demo to validate feasibility and interoperability of the passive synchronization.}, url = {https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/85}, year = {2023}, howpublished = {C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange, NLR, https://doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-13}, doi = {10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932} }
https://dx.doi.org/10.23919/ICPE2023-ECCEAsia54778.2023.10213932

Details

Data from Jan 1, 2023

Last updated Mar 30, 2026

Submitted Jun 2, 2026

Organization

NLR

Contact

Nathan Baeckeland

Authors

Heather Chang

NLR

Nathan Baeckeland

NLR

Abhishek Banerjee

Siemens

Gab-Su Seo

NLR
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