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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Energy Res., 21 July 2021
Sec. Solar Energy
This article is part of the Research Topic Forecasting Solar Radiation, Photovoltaic Power and Thermal Energy Production. Applications. View all 9 articles

Design and Evaluation of Fuzzy Adaptive Particle Swarm Optimization Based Maximum Power Point Tracking on Photovoltaic System Under Partial Shading Conditions

  • Department of Engineering Technology, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States

Artificial intelligence methods such as fuzzy logic and particle swarm optimization (PSO) have been applied to maximum power point tracking (MPPT) for solar panels. The P-V curve of a solar panel exhibits multiple peaks under partial shading condition (PSC) when all modules of a solar panel do not receive the same solar irradiation. Although conventional PSO has been shown to perform well under uniform insolation, it is often unable to find the global maximum power point under PSC. Fuzzy adaptive PSO controllers have been proposed for MPPT. However, the controller became computation-intensive in order to adjust the PSO parameters for each particle. In this paper, fuzzy adaptive PSO-based and conventional PSO-based MPPT are compared and evaluated in the aspect of design and performance. A simple fuzzy adaptive PSO controller for MPPT was designed to reach the global optimal point under PSC and uniform irradiation. The controller combines the advantages of both PSO and fuzzy control. The fuzzy controller dynamically adjusts the PSO parameter to improve the convergence speed and global search capability. Since tuning of the PSO parameter is designed to be common for all particles, it reduced the computation complexity. The fuzzy controller’s rule base is designed to obtain a fast transient response and stable steady state response. Design of the fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT is verified with simulation results using a boost converter. The results are evaluated in comparison to the results using a conventional PSO controller under PSC. Simulation shows the fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT is able to improve the global search process and increase the convergency speed. The comparison indicates the settling time using the fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT is 14% faster under PSC on average and 30% faster under uniform irradiation than the settling time using the conventional PSO. Both the fuzzy adaptive and conventional PSO controllers have similar output power tracking accuracy.

1 Introduction

Solar power generation has seen rapid growth in the past decade (Madvar et al., 2018; Al-Dahidi et al., 2019; Guozden et al., 2020; Sohani et al., 2021). Solar power has the advantage of low maintenance, noiseless and environmentally friendly power generation. Improving photovoltaic (PV) efficiency is a key goal of research and helps make PV technology costs competitive with conventional sources of energy (Alizadeh et al., 2020; Maleki et al., 2020). A major challenge in the use of PV is posed by its nonlinear current–voltage (I–V) characteristics, which result in a unique maximum power point (MPP) on the power–voltage (P–V) curve. To improve efficiency, maximum power point tracking (MPPT) is needed along with power converters to ensure optimal utilization of solar power systems. The objective of MPPT is to extract the maximum amount of power under varying temperature and irradiation conditions. Several MPPT algorithms have been studied, including perturb and observe (P&O), incremental conductance, fractional open-circuit voltage, and fractional short-circuit current (Esram and Chapman, 2007). The solar panel model was linearized into a Thevenin equivalent circuit to design the MPPT (Nguyen et al., 2020). Artificial intelligence MPPT methods include fuzzy logic control and neural network. Fuzzy logic controllers do not need an accurate mathematical model, and are not sensitive to parameter changes (Khosravi et al., 2019; Khosravi et al., 2020). Fuzzy logic based MPPT has been shown to perform well under uniform insolation (Rezk et al., 2019). However, study of MPPT control methods has mainly focused on uniform insolation where only one maximum power point (MPP) exists in the power-voltage (P-V) curve.

Partial shading condition (PSC) refers to conditions when all modules of a solar panel do not receive the same solar irradiation. PSCs are very common in solar power systems, especially in urban areas and in areas with trees and low moving clouds (Patel and Agarwal, 2008; Ghasemi et al., 2016). In PSC, multiple maximum power points (MPPs) are in the P-V curve. Conventional MPPT algorithms assume a single MPP and are unable to identify the global MPP among the local MPPs, thus they usually track local peaks. This can cause significant energy loss (Tey and Mekhilef, 2014). Therefore, it is necessary to develop new MPPT techniques to reliably track the global MPP under PSC (Chen et al., 2014).

Soft computing based algorithms were recently developed to obtain the global optimal solution under PSC. Biological optimization algorithms such as genetic algorithms (GA), gray wolf optimization, colony of flashing flies, artificial bee colony, and particle swarm optimization (PSO) have been applied to MPPT under PSC. Gray wolf optimization imitates the leadership hierarchy and hunting mechanism of gray wolves in nature. It was used to improve tracking efficiency and steady-state oscillations (Mohanty et al., 2016; AlShabi et al., 2021). Colony of flashing flies is inspired by the movement of fireflies. The tracking procedure consists of positioning the fireflies in the possible solution space, and based on the PV output power, the flies move to the promised regions (Sundareswaran et al., 2014). Artificial bee colony simulates the intelligent foraging behavior of a swarm of honeybees. The entire population is divided into three categories: employed bees, onlookers and scout bees. The cooperation and communication among the three groups lead to an optimal solution (Sundareswaran et al., 2015). Particle swarm optimization (PSO) is a population-based optimization technique inspired by the motion of bird flocks. It provides an effective metaheuristic approach that can be applied to optimization problems with several local optimal points (Al-Shabi et al., 2021). Compared to the other evolutionary algorithms, PSO method is simpler in structure, less computationally extensive and easier for experimental implementation. A number of conventional and modified PSO methods were reported for MPPT (Chen et al., 2010; Cheng et al., 2015; Renaudineau et al., 2015; Koad et al., 2017). PSO algorithm was used to tune the membership function of a fuzzy controller for MPPT to reduce the steady-state oscillation (Soufi et al., 2016; Priyadarshi et al., 2019). A deterministic PSO was introduced to improve the MPPT capability under PSC. Random numbers in the acceleration factor of conventional PSO were removed. The maximum change in velocity is restricted to a particular value based on P-V characteristics of PSC. It results in more consistent solution and simpler control structure. However, a previous study of the P-V characteristics under PSC is required (Ishaque and Salam, 2013). Conventional PSO was modified for MPPT, where the parameters were adjusted linearly to improve on accuracy (Liu et al., 2012). Tuning of PSO parameters in the literature were mostly linear. Since PSO is a nonlinear search process, linear tuning is not enough to achieve highly efficient algorithm, while nonlinear tuning can make the algorithm overly complicated (Merchaoui et al., 2020). In addition, advanced PSO control methods have not been fully investigated for PSC.

Presented in this paper is a fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT. Motivation of the research is to combine the advantages of both PSO and fuzzy control to improve the speed of the MPPT controller, find a global optimal solution under both PSC and uniform irridiation, and keep the simple structure of PSO at the same time. Controllers based on fuzzy logic have been applied to a broad range of engineering problems, particularly those having nonlinear dynamics (Guo et al., 2009). Design of fuzzy controllers is based on expert knowledge about a plant instead of a precise mathematical model. The fuzzy controller dynamically adjusts the PSO parameter to improve the convergence speed. Simulation results show the controller is able to track the global MPP under PSC where multiple local MPP exist as well as under uniform irridiation Settling time using the proposed controller is 14% faster under PSC on average and 30% faster under uniform irradiation than the settling time using regular PSO controller.

The paper is organized as follows. Section 2 describes a conventional PSO controller. The proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO is presented in Section 3. Section 4 describes system configuration and simulation. Simulation results are reported and compared in Section 5. Finally, the conclusion and recommendations are made in the last section.

2 Conventional Particle Swarm Optimization

PSO is a stochastic population-based evolutionary algorithm search method modeled after the behavior of flocks of birds (Ishaque and Salam, 2013). PSO requires a swarm of particles. Each particle represents a possible solution. Initially A swarm of particles is randomly placed in the search space. The controller searches for the optimal solution with the particles’ velocity and position communicating with each other. Particles are moved around in a multi-dimensional space in search of the optimal solution. Each particle has its own personal best position, Pbest. The next position pk+1 depends on both Pbest and the global best position of the space, Gbest. It is determined iteratively using 1, where the next position, pk+1 represents the new duty cycle, d is the current duty cycle, and the velocity vk+1, calculated by 1, represents the step size. Table 1 define the variables.

pk+1=d+vk+1(1)
vk+1=ωvjk+c1r1(Pbestd)+c2r2(Gbestd)(2)

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Definition of variables.

In 2, ω stands for the inertia weight, and c1 and c2 are the cognitive and social parameters, respectively, that are responsible for acceleration. r1 and r2 are random variables that vary between 0 and 1. The acceleration coefficients c1 and c2 move each particle in the direction of Pbest and Gbest. The inertial weight ω balances the global and local searches to reduce the number of iterations to obtain the global best solution.

The flowchart of conventional PSO is presented in Figure 1. Inputs to the PSO controller are the voltage and current from the solar panel. 36 particles are placed in a 6×6 matrix. Each position in the matrix represents a solution that includes the value of the duty cycle and output power. The initial values of particles were randomly chosen. Particles travel across the grid, calculating the power and duty cycle at each position. At the end of each iteration, the particles store the best solution. Individual best solutions are compared and the global best solution is updated. In the next iteration, the particles try to converge to the newly updated global best solution. When used for MPPT, the search process should satisfy the condition in 3 at each iteration, where OP is the solar panel’s output power, j is the particle number, and k is the iteration number. The convergence criteria are met when velocities of all particles become smaller than a threshold, or when the maximum number of iterations is reached. The PSO algorithm will stop and output the obtained Gbest solution when the criteria are met. Therefore, the controller is able to identify the global MPP among the local MPPs through the global search process.

OPjk+1>OPjk(3)

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. Flowchart of conventional PSO.

3 Proposed Fuzzy Adaptive Particle Swarm Optimization Based MPPT

In 2, the inertial weight ω is a very important parameter. It is used to control the convergence behavior of PSO. An optimal value of ω is needed to find the MPP with as few iterations as possible. It balances the exploration and exploitation of the search process. During exploration, particles check different search areas to detect the region containing the optimal solution. After that, the particles concentrate on the best candidates to converge to the final solution. A higher value of ω promotes exploration, while a smaller value encourages an efficient exploitation process. In conventional PSO, ω is a constant. It results in a slow dynamic response for MPPT. To improve the performance, this paper used a fuzzy controller to vary the value of ω iteratively based on the fitness function and the inertial weight ω.

A fuzzy controller contains four main components: 1) the input membership functions that convert its inputs into information the inference mechanism can use to activate and apply rules, 2) the rule base that contains the expert’s linguistic description, 3) the interference mechanism that evaluates which control rules are relevant, and 4) the defuzzification interface that converts the result from the inference mechanism into the control output (Guo et al., 2009). The flowchart of the proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO based MPPT is shown in Figure 2.

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. Flowchart of the proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO controller.

The normalized fitness function is shown in 4, where f(d(k)) is the current solution, Fbest is the best solution and Fworst is the worst solution. The normalized fitness function quantifies the distance between the particle and global best position. When the normalized fitness function is large, it means the particle is far away from the MPP; therefore, the inertial weight ω should be increased to promote exploration. Conversely, when the normalized fitness function is small, it implies the particle is close to the MPP; therefore, a smaller value of ω is needed to enhance local search capability.

NFFj=f(d(k))FbestFworstFbest(4)

The normalized fitness function and the inertial weight ω are the inputs to the fuzzy controller. First, membership functions for the inputs and outputs are defined. Each universe of discourse is divided into fuzzy subsets. The membership functions are shown in Figure 3. There are seven fuzzy subsets in the fuzzy controller: NB,NM,NS,Z,PS,PM,PB, where N indicates negative, Z indicates zero, P represents positive, B indicates big, M indicates medium, and S indicates small. There are three fuzzy subsets for the positive and negative parts of the universe of discourse, respectively.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Membership functions of the fuzzy controller.

The rule base is derived from general knowledge of the PSO controller, and is tuned based on experimental results. There is a tradeoff between the size of the rule base and the performance of the controller. For the same universe of discourse, more membership functions results in finer control. The output of the fuzzy controller has less variations for small changes in either input, and a more accurate control is achieved. A 7×7 rule base was designed, as shown in Table 2. The output of the fuzzy system is then added to the current ω to create the new and improved inertia weight shown in 5. A block diagram of the fuzzy controller is shown in Figure 4.

ωk+1=ωk+Δω(5)

TABLE 2
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TABLE 2. Fuzzy rules for given member functions.

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. Block diagram of fuzzy controller.

4 Simulation

The system was simulated in Matlab/Simulink™. It includes four solar panels connected in series, a boost converter and the fuzzy adaptive PSO MPPT controller. Configuration of the system is shown in Figure 5. The solar panels and power converter were built using Simscape in Simulink. Simulink is a graphical programming environment for modeling, simulating and analyzing of dynamic systems, whereas Simscape is the physical modeling part in Simulink environment. The PSO controller is implemented using Matlab by writing a function. Rapid accelerator mode is used to increase the speed by generating an executable for the simulation. It only takes 3 s to run the simulation. Another option to implement artificial intelligence algorithms is Python language, an open source programming language. The advantage of using Matlab/Simulink™ is that it provides a productive computing environment for engineering systems in which physical components are conveniently available.

FIGURE 5
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FIGURE 5. System Configuration.

The PV array model in Simulink allows modeling of a variety of preset PV modules available from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory System Advisor Model as well as user-defined PV modules. PV module Trina Solar TSM-250PA05.08 was used for this simulation. The maximum output power is 249.86 W, with open circuit voltage Voc of 37.6 V, and short circuit current Isc of 8.55 A. The voltage at maximum power point Vmp is 31 V, and the current at maximum power point Imp is 8.06 A. The PV array model has four parallel strings, and 10 series-connected modules per string. Figure 6 shows the parameter configurations of the PV array model in Simulink. Four PV arrays were then connected in series for the simulation.

FIGURE 6
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FIGURE 6. Parameter Configuration of PV arrays.

The circuit parameters for the boost converter are Vin = 20 V, Vo = 12 V, L = 1.47 μH, C = 0.467 μF, and R = 53 Ω. The switching frequency is 50 kHz. Table 3 shows the parameters of the proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT controller.

TABLE 3
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TABLE 3. Particle swarm optimization parameters.

5 Results

Simulation results of the fuzzy adaptive PSO MPPT and conventional PSO MPPT controllers are presented and compared in this section. Table 4 shows four operating conditions of irradiation levels for each of the four PV arrays connected in series. The first three instances are partial shading conditions, and the last one is uniform irradiation of 1000 W/m2 without partial shading. For the first instance of partial shading, the P-V curve is shown in Figure 7, where the peak of the curve is the global maximum power point (MPP). There are a few local MPPs below the global MPP. Figure 8 compares the startup transient response using the proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO and the regular PSO MPPT controller. The settling time of the fuzzy adaptive PSO MPPT is 0.0983 s, while the settling time of the regular PSO is 0.1152 s.

TABLE 4
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TABLE 4. Irridiance variations (W/m2).

FIGURE 7
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FIGURE 7. PV curve for irridiation 1.

FIGURE 8
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FIGURE 8. Startup response of the fuzzy adaptive PSO and the convential PSO MPPT for irridiation 1.

Figures 911 show the P-V curve for instances 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Figures 1214 compare the startup response of the output power using fuzzy adaptive PSO and regular PSO controllers for irradiation levels of instances 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The results show that the fuzzy adaptive PSO controller is able to reach a steady state faster than the regular PSO controller. A comparison of the performance is quantified in Tables 5, 6. Table 5 shows that the settling time for the adaptive fuzzy PSO controller is faster than the regular PSO controller under all four irradiation conditions. Simulation results show that the controller is able to track the global MPP under PSC where multiple local MPP exist, as well as under uniform irradiation. The settling time using the proposed controller is 14% faster under PSC on average and 30% faster under uniform irradiation than the settling time using the regular PSO controller. Table 6 compares the output power and the maximum power point under the specific irradiation conditions. It shows both controllers were able to track the maximum power point under all four operating conditions.

FIGURE 9
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FIGURE 9. Startup response of the fuzzy adaptive PSO and the convential PSO MPPT for irridiation 2.

FIGURE 10
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FIGURE 10. Startup response of the fuzzy adaptive PSO and the convential PSO MPPT for irridiation 3.

FIGURE 11
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FIGURE 11. Startup response of the fuzzy adaptive PSO and the convential PSO MPPT for irridiation 4.

FIGURE 12
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FIGURE 12. PV curve for irridiation 2.

FIGURE 13
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FIGURE 13. PV curve for irridiation 3.

FIGURE 14
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FIGURE 14. PV curve for irridiation 4.

TABLE 5
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TABLE 5. Comparison of settling time for fuzzy adaptive PSO (FPSO) and conventional PSO.

TABLE 6
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TABLE 6. Comparison of maximum power point (MPP), output power for fuzzy adaptive PSO (FPSO) and conventional PSO.

6 Conclusion

A fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT was designed to track the maximum power point under partial shading conditions. The fuzzy controller was designed based on knowledge of the plant and computer simulations. The inertial weight was updated continuously by the fuzzy controller. Simulation results show that the fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT was able to improve the global search process and increase the convergence speed. Compared to conventional PSO, the proposed controller achieved a faster response with accurate maximum power tracking. Future work can apply the proposed fuzzy adaptive PSO-based MPPT to isolated DC-DC converters such as flyback converters and current-fed dual active bridge converters for large scale grid-connected PV systems.

Data Availability Statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.

Author Contributions

LG and NA contributed to the conception and design of the study. Both authors performed the simulation, wrote the manuscript, contributed to manuscript revision, and approved the submitted version.

Funding

Partial support for this work was provided by the United States National Science Foundation’s Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE) program under Award No. DUE-1712146. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: partial shading, PV array, maximum power point tracking, fuzzy logic controller, particle swarm optimization

Citation: Guo L and Abdul NMM (2021) Design and Evaluation of Fuzzy Adaptive Particle Swarm Optimization Based Maximum Power Point Tracking on Photovoltaic System Under Partial Shading Conditions. Front. Energy Res. 9:712175. doi: 10.3389/fenrg.2021.712175

Received: 20 May 2021; Accepted: 28 June 2021;
Published: 21 July 2021.

Edited by:

Mamdouh El Haj Assad, University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates

Reviewed by:

Mohammad Alhuyi Nazari, University of Tehran, Iran
Siamak Hoseinzadeh, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

Copyright © 2021 Guo and Abdul. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Liping Guo, lguo@niu.edu

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.