- Lin, Yashen;
- Eto, Joseph H;
- Johnson, Brian B;
- Flicker, Jack D;
- Lasseter, Robert H;
- Pico, Hugo N Villegas;
- Seo, Gab-Su;
- Pierre, Brian J;
- Ellis, Abraham;
- Miller, Jeremiah;
- Yuan, Guohui
Managing the stability of today's electric power systems is based on decades of experience with the physical properties and control responses of large synchronous generators. Today's electric power systems are rapidly transitioning toward having an increasing proportion of generation from nontraditional sources, such as wind and solar (among others), as well as energy storage devices, such as batteries. In addition to the variable nature of many renewable generation sources (because of the weather-driven nature of their fuel supply), these newer sources vary in size - from residential-scale rooftop systems to utility-scale power plants - and they are interconnected throughout the electric grid, both from within the distribution system and directly to the high-voltage transmission system. Most important for our purposes, many of these new resources are connected to the power system through power electronic inverters. Collectively, we refer to these sources as inverter-based resources.