DOI: 10.3390/su18136738 ISSN: 2071-1050

Development of a DC-Coupled Three-Phase Grid-Connected Solar Photovoltaic Integrated Battery Energy Storage System with Peak Shaving and Valley-Filling Control

Kuei-Hsiang Chao, Yu-Hua Wang, Chang-De Wu

This study addresses the power dispatching of a DC-coupled three-phase grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) and energy storage-integrated system by proposing a peak shaving and valley-filling control architecture based on time-of-use (TOU) pricing. This research involves achieving maximum power-point tracking (MPPT) for PVMAs using a boost converter combined with the perturb and observe (P&O) method. A lithium-iron phosphate battery pack is integrated into the DC link via a bidirectional buck-boost converter, where charging and discharging control is executed according to peak and off-peak periods to regulate and stabilize the DC link voltage. Furthermore, bidirectional power flow control for peak and off-peak electricity consumption is realized using hysteresis current control and sinusoidal pulse-width modulation (SPWM) technologies within a smart inverter. By integrating the aforementioned power control architecture, the grid system can store energy from the utility during off-peak hours and release the stored energy during peak hours to reduce the load demand on the utility side. Initially, a simulation environment was established using Matlab/Simulink (2024b version) software, followed by control verification of the proposed system on a physical platform. The simulation and experimental results confirm that the integrated control architecture can precisely control the system’s DC link voltage at 800 V and stabilize the grid-connected AC voltage at an effective value (RMS) of 380 V. Moreover, under conditions of peak/off-peak switching and load variations, the system effectively demonstrates its stability and efficacy in performing valley filling and peak shaving. The proposed strategy achieves a power factor above 0.99 and a total harmonic distortion (THD) below 5%, regulates the DC-link voltage at 800 V with a steady-state error within 1.75%, and prevents up to 66.4 kWh of over-contract energy consumption per day under a 35 kW contract capacity, thereby contributing to sustainable energy management and economic savings.

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