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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: del Pozo, Andrea Espinosa, Hernandez, Araceli, Badesa, Luis
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.01248
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author del Pozo, Andrea Espinosa
Hernandez, Araceli
Badesa, Luis
author_facet del Pozo, Andrea Espinosa
Hernandez, Araceli
Badesa, Luis
contents The increasing penetration of photovoltaic (PV) generation in low-voltage distribution networks presents operational challenges, with overvoltages being among the most critical. This study introduces a tool based on Unbalanced Optimal Power Flow (UBOPF) to assess cost-effective local inverter control strategies specifically aimed at mitigating overvoltage issues. Two approaches are examined: dynamic active power curtailment and combined active and reactive power control. These strategies are tested on a residential low-voltage network with high PV penetration, where the UBOPF model with voltage-magnitude constraints was implemented in Julia using the JuMP optimization package. The results demonstrate that both methods are effective in maintaining voltage levels within regulatory limits, with the latter leading to lower PV curtailment. The analysis highlights the need to consider these control actions as ancillary services to the grid, which should be properly compensated given their effect on generator revenues.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_01248
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Least-Cost Overvoltage Control in PV-Rich Distribution Networks via Unbalanced Optimal Power Flow
del Pozo, Andrea Espinosa
Hernandez, Araceli
Badesa, Luis
Systems and Control
The increasing penetration of photovoltaic (PV) generation in low-voltage distribution networks presents operational challenges, with overvoltages being among the most critical. This study introduces a tool based on Unbalanced Optimal Power Flow (UBOPF) to assess cost-effective local inverter control strategies specifically aimed at mitigating overvoltage issues. Two approaches are examined: dynamic active power curtailment and combined active and reactive power control. These strategies are tested on a residential low-voltage network with high PV penetration, where the UBOPF model with voltage-magnitude constraints was implemented in Julia using the JuMP optimization package. The results demonstrate that both methods are effective in maintaining voltage levels within regulatory limits, with the latter leading to lower PV curtailment. The analysis highlights the need to consider these control actions as ancillary services to the grid, which should be properly compensated given their effect on generator revenues.
title Least-Cost Overvoltage Control in PV-Rich Distribution Networks via Unbalanced Optimal Power Flow
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.01248