Bold text are my changes to your text.
eeprom said:
Scenario 1: Grid is active
Each inverter synchronizes itself to the grid when power is available (through solar and wind).
IEEE 2030.7 calls this the grid-connected steady state. I encourage you to think of solar and wind acting as negative load rather than generation sources since we can't cause their output to go up on command, only down. The battery should be used for renewable firming/peak shaving/energy arbitrage. The utility may not allow export based on your interconnect agreement, so be cautious of that and store excess generation in the battery or curtail the renewables output when the battery is full.
eeprom said:
Each inverter shuts itself down when there is abnormal voltage or frequency.
Correct.
eeprom said:
Scenario 2: Grid goes offline
IEEE 2030.7 calls this a transition from grid-connected to islanded state (unintentional islanding).
eeprom said:
27/59/81O/81U relay detects loss of grid and trips main breaker, creating an island.
Note that this trip cannot lockout the breaker, it has to automatically reset so the breaker can close when the grid comes back, but overcurrent and similar protective trips should lockout the breaker. Also, inverters will need to have their anti-islanding functions shut them down until they see a stable source. Make sure the island will maintain effective grounding as well once disconnected.
eeprom said:
Each inverter goes into islanding mode.
Only one source should be grid-forming, and when you have intermittent sources like solar and wind, that better be the battery power converter. The other inverters stay in grid-following mode. The grid-forming source regulates the voltage and frequency in the island. You may also need your protection trip settings to change once islanded, as the amount of available fault current will probably decrease dramatically. A controller should be managing the charging and discharging of the battery from the other sources so it doesn't run out of energy.
eeprom said:
Scenario 3: Grid is reactivated after a trip, while system has been running as island.
IEEE 2030.7 calls this an open transition from islanded to grid-connected state (reconnection).
eeprom said:
Relay detects reactivation of grid.
Relay disables all inverters.
Relay closes main CB
Relay reactivates the inverters.
I agree with the first action, but it would be better that a controller do the last three of these actions than try to do them with a relay. However, the relay 27/59/81O/81U should all be used in an output to block the close circuit when any one of these is asserted - make sure its VTs are on the line side of the breaker. When all four clear and a synch check 25 function ensures a dead bus transfer will occur once the island sources shut down, set a timer to ensure the grid has been stable for a desired period, then remove the block close and close the breaker. Also, the battery needs to be brought back online in grid-following mode, and protection settings may need to be reset due to the higher fault currents available when connected to the grid.
eeprom said:
Other questions...
If there are multiple inverters, will one have to be a master for island mode?
Yes, the battery. See above transition to island.
eeprom said:
If the inverters are online with the grid, and the grid drops out, how can that be detected? The bus will see the voltage created by the inverters?
See above transition to island. Inverters have anti-islanding detection built in to turn their outputs off to avoid backfeeding the grid. Once the breaker opens, the battery power converter can be brought back online in grid-forming mode.
eeprom said:
If the grid drops out, will the inverters see a ton of load and then just trip anyway?
They'll trip when the grid goes away. Once the breaker is open, you may need to shed non-critical load if the sources in the island aren't adequate to power the whole load. If the entire load exceeds all of the sources, the battery will shut down causing the PV and wind to shut down, and the island will go black.
I highly recommend a microgrid controller to manage all of these things. Also, a competent microgrid design engineer would be able to help size the system components, perform studies, avoid pitfalls, help with understanding codes and regulations (NEC, IEEE 1547 series, IEEE 2030.7, etc.), assist with the utility interconnection agreement and review of utility system and facility impact studies, etc. If you don't have the competency, don't try to do it yourself.
xnuke
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