Impact of IEEE 2800-2022 Fault-Ride Through Requirements on the Protection of Network Dominated by IBRs
The modern electric grid is rapidly evolving as large-scale renewable energy resources (RES) such as photovoltaic and wind power are increasingly deployed alongside battery energy storage systems (BESS). These hybrid power plants rely on inverter‑based resources (IBRs), which interface with the grid through power electronic converters rather than synchronous machines. Because IBRs lack inherent inertia and depend on fast-switching semiconductor controls, their behavior during disturbances is fundamentally different from traditional generators. Grid-following (GFL) inverters historically synchronized to the grid and delivered fixed power unless abnormal grid conditions prompted disconnection. The emergence of gridforming (GFM) control has shifted this paradigm by enabling inverters to…