Micro Grids

Item Number: 
EMG 1 / EMG 2
Control of stand-alone networks
Power Engineering | Micro Grid Trainer
Power Engineering | Micro Grid Trainer
Power Engineering | Micro Grid Trainer

A stand-alone power network is a type of power supply network which is closed and has no active lines coupling it to other parts of the electrical power supply grid. A stand-alone network is markedly smaller than a combined electricity grid and does not usually incorporate high-voltage power lines. For this type of network, there are two distinct modes of operation, stand-alone mode, and isolated parallel or generator-to-generator operation. This type of supply network is frequently used for the industrial power supplies of large businesses.

When this stand-alone network is connected to a smart grid, it is referred to as a microgrid. This type of grid has three different operating modes: on-grid, off-grid and dual mode. Microgrids will be playing a huge role in the smart grids of tomorrow.

A microgrid features the following benefits:

  • Transmission and transformer losses are reduced
  • More independence from major power suppliers
  • Smart grid act as a back-up system
  • Intelligently controlled power supply and consumption thanks to SCADA
  • Power generation using renewable energy sources
  • Optimizing the quality, reliability, and sustainability of electricity

Micro Grid - Stand-alone operation

Training contents

  • Fundamentals of isolated, stand-alone networks.
  • Control of a generator in a stand-alone network.
  • Coordination of energy needs and generating capacity in stand-alone networks.
  • Use of modern information technology such as networked sensors/actuators, PLC control, and the SCADA operating environment
  • "Smart metering" of a "slack bus" to make a sub-network autonomous.
  • Manual control
  • Voltage control
  • Frequency control

Micro Grid - Isolated parallel operation

Training contents

  • Control of multiple generators in a stand-alone network
  • Control of multiple generators in parallel generation mode
  • Coordination of energy needs and generating capacity in stand-alone networks.
  • Use of modern information technology such as networked sensors/actuators, PLC control and the SCADA operating environment
  • Smart metering of a "slack bus" to make a sub-network autonomous.
  • Manual control
  • Voltage control
  • Frequency control
  • Torque control
  • Power factor (cos phi) control
  • Droop control

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