Power Electronics for Energy Transition and Renewable Energy Conversion Processes
1. Introduction
2. Technological Developments and Challenges
2.1. Semiconductor Devices
2.2. Converter Architectures and Integration
2.3. Control, Digitalization, and Artificial Intelligence
2.4. Grid Stability and Grid-Forming Control
2.5. Power Quality, Reliability, and Adaptive Operation
2.6. Power-to-X Integration
3. Contributions of the Special Issue
3.1. Converters, Stability, and Resilience
- The work of Rajendran et al. [19] presents a detailed review of the state of the art in multi-megawatt wind turbines. Their analysis identifies a consistent industrial trend toward Permanent Magnet Synchronous Generators (PMSGs) combined with full-scale power converters. The study emphasizes the ongoing transition to medium-voltage converters, particularly Modular Multilevel Converters (MMCs), as the preferred architecture for managing power levels exceeding 15 MW. This hardware evolution is essential for ensuring the efficient and reliable scaling of offshore and onshore wind generation.
- Barrueto Guzmán et al. [26] presents a study related to the increasing prevalence of inverter-based generation. This paper extends beyond single-area analyzes by considering the dynamics of a two-area interconnected system. Simulation demonstrates that decentralized synthetic inertia control, optimized for each local area, maintains global system stability even under varying interconnection strengths. This result provides important insight for transmission system operators, showing that modular inertia control schemes can preserve grid stability while supporting grid-forming converter operation.
- Loulijat et al. [27] focus on improving the Low-Voltage Ride-Through (LVRT) capability of Doubly-Fed Induction Generator (DFIGs), a widely used configuration. The authors propose an MPS that enhances traditional crowbar approaches. The main contribution is the ability of the generator to retain control of power flow during grid faults without disconnecting the rotor-side converter. This feature enables the continuous provision of grid-supporting services during voltage disturbances, thereby improving the resilience and grid value of DFIG-based wind farms.
3.2. Power Quality and Grid Intelligence
- Dash and Sadhu [22] present a paper in the field of power quality and APFs. Their analysis highlights the trend of integrating filtering capabilities into renewable energy inverters, enabling the development of multifunctional inverters. Emphasis is placed on converter topologies with reduced component counts, addressing the industrial demand for cost-effective, high-power-density solutions that meet the stringent harmonic distortion requirements set by modern grid codes.
- Wang et al. [25] study the phenomenon of parallel harmonic resonance, which is commonly found in weak grids. This condition occurs when APFs operate in conjunction with reactive power compensation devices, such as Thyristor-Switched Capacitors (TSCs), forming a resonant circuit that may be excited by nonlinear load harmonics. The authors propose an adaptive control method based on a Second-Order Generalized Integrator–Frequency-Locked Loop that identifies resonance conditions in real time and dynamically adjusts a virtual damping loop. This approach exemplifies intelligent control strategies that respond to evolving grid dynamics, aligning with the current research direction toward adaptive and resilient converter control.
- Travieso-Torres et al. [23] extend this adaptive control paradigm through a cascade MRAC scheme. The method can regulate nonlinear and time-varying systems without requiring precise modeling or detailed parameter knowledge. This contribution represents a critical step toward autonomous, or “plug-and-play,” renewable generation units capable of connecting to the grid and self-tuning for stable operation. This concept embodies the emerging AI for Power framework, in which controllers learn and adapt to system behavior, thereby enhancing reliability and performance in complex grid environments.
3.3. Power System and New Energy Vectors
- Rodríguez-Benítez et al. [24] present a comprehensive review on APD, addressing a key reliability issue in single-phase inverters that are widely used in residential photovoltaic systems. The inherent power pulsation at twice the grid frequency in these converters requires large electrolytic capacitors in the DC link, which are typically the weakest link in terms of lifetime. Their analysis emphasizes that architectures based on SSCs can effectively substitute these components with long-life film capacitors, increasing both power density and system durability.
- Deng et al. [20] and Muñoz Díaz et al. [21] explore the connection between power electronics and the emerging P2X framework. The work of Deng et al. [20] examines this concept within the dense urban context of Shenzhen, modeling scenarios for green hydrogen production from renewable and nuclear energy sources. Their study demonstrates that power electronic converters act as a technological bridge linking the electric grid with the industrial and transportation sectors, enabling the conversion of electrical energy into chemical fuels.
- The study by Muñoz Díaz et al. [21] considers a P2X techno-economic analysis by estimating the LCOH. Their results indicate that capital expenditure (CAPEX) for electrolyzers currently exerts a stronger influence on hydrogen costs than the electricity price under power purchase agreements (PPAs). This conclusion provides an important guideline for policy and investment decisions, highlighting that innovation efforts must prioritize cost reduction in electrolyzer technologies.
4. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Article Reference | Theme | Problem Addressed | Key Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rajendran et al. [19] | Wind Energy Systems | Technology scaling for multi-megawatt wind turbines (>6 MW). | Review of trends in generators and power converters (transition to medium voltage and modular multilevel converters) for large-scale turbines. |
| Deng et al. [20] | Power-to-Hydrogen | Integration of green hydrogen into a dense urban power system (Shenzhen). | Analysis of scenarios involving offshore wind and nuclear energy, identifying key challenges for coupling hydrogen systems with the electrical grid. |
| Muñoz Díaz et al. [21] | Green Hydrogen Economics | Economic feasibility and cost optimization of green hydrogen production. | Modeling and simulation of the LCOH, identifying electrolyzer CAPEX as the dominant cost factor. |
| Dash & Sadhu [22] | Power Quality | Harmonic mitigation in grid-connected renewable systems. | Comprehensive review of Active Power Filter (APF) topologies, emphasizing switch-count reduction and multifunctional inverter designs for cost and size reduction. |
| Travieso-Torres et al. [23] | Advanced Control Systems | Control of nonlinear, time-varying renewable systems with unknown parameters. | Proposal of a Robust Cascade MRAC method that eliminates the need for linearization or parameter estimation, ensuring system stability. |
| Rodríguez-Benítez et al. [24] | PV System Reliability | Power pulsation and reliability issues in single-phase PV inverters. | Review of Active Power Decoupling (APD) techniques, highlighting SSC as a viable replacement for electrolytic capacitors. |
| Wang et al. [25] | Grid Stability (Weak Grids) | Parallel harmonic resonance in weak grids with hybrid compensation (APF + TSC). | Adaptive composite control strategy using SOGI-FLL to detect resonance and dynamically adjust damping. |
| Barrueto Guzmán et al. [26] | Grid Stability (Low Inertia) | Stability of interconnected, multi-area power systems with low inertia. | Stability analysis demonstrating that decentralized synthetic inertia control maintains global stability. |
| Loulijat et al. [27] | System Reliability (Faults) | DFIG vulnerability during balanced voltage dips (LVRT capability). | Modified Protection Scheme that prevents rotor-side converter disconnection during faults, maintaining power control and improving DFIG performance. |
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Diaz, M.; Rojas, A.; Rodríguez, J. Power Electronics for Energy Transition and Renewable Energy Conversion Processes. Processes 2025, 13, 3650. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13113650
Diaz M, Rojas A, Rodríguez J. Power Electronics for Energy Transition and Renewable Energy Conversion Processes. Processes. 2025; 13(11):3650. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13113650
Chicago/Turabian StyleDiaz, Matias, Alexander Rojas, and José Rodríguez. 2025. "Power Electronics for Energy Transition and Renewable Energy Conversion Processes" Processes 13, no. 11: 3650. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13113650
APA StyleDiaz, M., Rojas, A., & Rodríguez, J. (2025). Power Electronics for Energy Transition and Renewable Energy Conversion Processes. Processes, 13(11), 3650. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13113650

