In progress of the energy transition renewable energies and electrical traffic vehicles gain importance. Their sustainable use requires advanced grid technologies and powerful storage systems. One challenge is the integration of new hardware components into existing grid environments. To ensure smooth operation, all components must be linked and tested in advance. In the power hardware-in-the-loop (PHIL) process, the components to be tested are not directly integrated into the real system, but in a test facility with a virtual real-time system simulation. The Institute of Technical Physics (ITEP) of the KIT is running one of those solche PHIL-systems in the Energy Lab 2.0. New network components, network topologies and network technologies can be tested on the system in a virtual simulation environment in different operating modes. At 50 microsecond intervals, the simulator supplies the value for voltage or current at the point of the fictitious network where the test object is connected. This signal is sent to power amplifiers, which translate these values and output them as actual electrical quantities to the test object. The object under test thus "sees" a power grid from which it can draw power capability and feed it back. This power capability is measured and sent back to the real-time simulator, which takes it into account in the next computing step. The simulated grid thus reacts to the real test object and vice versa. The test scenarios are replicable to verify and validate results in this way. Complex operating situations can be quickly adapted digitally, so that test objects can be tested under changing conditions without great expenditure of time and money. New hardware products can be optimized in advance and brought to market faster.
You can get an overview of this technology at KIT stand. More details can be exchanged individually with the responsible scientific employees of KIT after the industry fair.
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