Revisiting the Voltage-Source Behavior: Why Impedance Magnitude of Grid-Forming Converter Rises Near Fundamental Frequency?
Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 23:33 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The impedance peak and negative-resistance region near the fundamental frequency in grid-forming converters originate from the integrative action in the active power control loop's power-to-angle mapping.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
This paper reveals that these phenomena originate from the inherent dynamics of the active power control loop, where the mapping from power disturbance to the synchronous angle inherently involves an integrative action, intrinsically preventing a positive-resistance characteristic near the fundamental frequency. This finding explains why existing grid codes in China, the United States, and Europe exclude a narrow band around the fundamental frequency in impedance-based evaluations. It is further shown that the width of the excluded frequency band is governed by the power-to-frequency dynamics. Based on this insight, a quantitative index is proposed to determine the exclusion bandwidth from 1
What carries the argument
The integrative action in the mapping from power disturbance to synchronous angle inside the active power control loop
Load-bearing premise
The integrative action in the power-to-angle mapping of the active power control loop is the dominant and inherent cause of the observed impedance peak and negative-resistance region.
What would settle it
If the impedance peak and negative-resistance region both disappear when the active power control loop is restructured to eliminate its integrative mapping from power to angle, while all other loops remain unchanged, the central claim would be supported; persistence of the peak would falsify it.
read the original abstract
Grid-forming (GFM) converters are generally expected to exhibit low impedance near the fundamental frequency due to their voltage-source behavior. However, an impedance peak and a negative-resistance region are consistently observed in this range, which contradicts this expectation and lacks a clear physical explanation. This paper reveals that these phenomena originate from the inherent dynamics of the active power control loop, where the mapping from power disturbance to the synchronous angle inherently involves an integrative action, intrinsically preventing a positive-resistance characteristic near the fundamental frequency. This finding explains why existing grid codes in China, the United States, and Europe exclude a narrow band around the fundamental frequency in impedance-based evaluations. It is further shown that the width of the excluded frequency band (e.g., +/- 3~5 Hz) is governed by the power-to-frequency dynamics. Based on this insight, a quantitative index is proposed to determine the exclusion bandwidth from the corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve. The proposed index provides a concise and theoretically grounded criterion for voltage-source assessment and impedance standardization of GFM converters.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims that the impedance magnitude peak and negative-resistance region observed near the fundamental frequency in grid-forming converters, which contradicts the expected low-impedance voltage-source behavior, originate intrinsically from the integrative action in the active power control loop's power-to-synchronous-angle mapping. This is presented as the inherent cause preventing a positive-resistance characteristic in that band. The work uses this to explain the narrow exclusion bands around the fundamental in impedance-based evaluations in Chinese, US, and European grid codes, shows that the band width is governed by power-to-frequency dynamics, and proposes a quantitative index for voltage-source assessment based on the corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve.
Significance. If the central derivation is sound and the integrative action is shown to dominate, the result would supply a physically grounded explanation for a recurring observation in GFM impedance data and a concise, theoretically motivated criterion for defining exclusion bandwidths in standards. The proposed index could reduce ad-hoc choices in compliance testing. However, the manuscript does not yet demonstrate that the power-loop integration remains the dominant contributor once closed-loop voltage and current controller dynamics are accounted for at frequencies near the fundamental.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract and §2] The central claim in the abstract and §2 that the negative-resistance region is 'intrinsically' produced by the integrative action in the power-to-angle mapping is not yet supported by an explicit decomposition. The small-signal impedance expression must be shown to retain the observed peak and negative-resistance region after the inner-loop transfer functions are isolated or their bandwidths are varied; without this, interactions with voltage/current controllers (whose bandwidths commonly reach several hundred Hz) cannot be ruled out as co-contributors.
- [§4, Eq. (15)] §4, Eq. (15) (or equivalent): the quantitative index is defined directly from the corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve that is itself generated by the power-control dynamics under study. This introduces a risk of partial circularity in the assessment criterion, because the corners used to set the exclusion bandwidth are produced by the same mechanism being invoked to explain the phenomenon.
- [§3] The manuscript does not report a sensitivity study or reduced-order model that isolates the contribution of the active-power integrator from the rest of the closed-loop system. A comparison of the full-order impedance against a version in which the power-to-angle integrator is replaced by a proportional path would directly test whether the integrative action is load-bearing for the negative-resistance region near the fundamental.
minor comments (2)
- [§2] Notation for the synchronous angle perturbation and the power disturbance should be introduced consistently in the first figure or equation block where they appear.
- [Figures 3-5] Figure captions should explicitly state the operating point (power level, grid strength) and controller bandwidths used for each plotted impedance curve.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and insightful comments. We appreciate the recognition of the potential significance of our findings regarding the origin of the impedance peak and negative-resistance region in grid-forming converters. Below we address each major comment point by point, indicating the revisions planned for the updated manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract and §2] The central claim in the abstract and §2 that the negative-resistance region is 'intrinsically' produced by the integrative action in the power-to-angle mapping is not yet supported by an explicit decomposition. The small-signal impedance expression must be shown to retain the observed peak and negative-resistance region after the inner-loop transfer functions are isolated or their bandwidths are varied; without this, interactions with voltage/current controllers (whose bandwidths commonly reach several hundred Hz) cannot be ruled out as co-contributors.
Authors: We agree that an explicit decomposition isolating the power-to-angle integrator is required to substantiate the claim that the negative-resistance region is intrinsic. In the revised manuscript we will add a dedicated derivation in which the inner-loop voltage and current controller transfer functions are isolated and replaced by their high-frequency approximations (unity gain near the fundamental). The resulting reduced expression retains both the magnitude peak and the negative-resistance region, confirming that these features arise from the integrator in the active-power loop. We will also include numerical sensitivity results obtained by varying inner-loop bandwidths over the range 200–800 Hz to demonstrate that the phenomenon persists under typical design conditions. revision: yes
-
Referee: [§4, Eq. (15)] §4, Eq. (15) (or equivalent): the quantitative index is defined directly from the corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve that is itself generated by the power-control dynamics under study. This introduces a risk of partial circularity in the assessment criterion, because the corners used to set the exclusion bandwidth are produced by the same mechanism being invoked to explain the phenomenon.
Authors: We acknowledge the referee’s concern about possible circularity. The corner frequencies are indeed a direct consequence of the integrative action under study. In the revision we will clarify that the proposed index is intended as a practical, measurement-oriented metric that extracts the exclusion bandwidth from observed impedance data without requiring explicit controller parameters. We will add an analytical section showing that the corner frequencies are explicitly determined by the power-loop integrator time constant and gain crossover, thereby grounding the index in the same physical mechanism while preserving its utility for standardization. revision: partial
-
Referee: [§3] The manuscript does not report a sensitivity study or reduced-order model that isolates the contribution of the active-power integrator from the rest of the closed-loop system. A comparison of the full-order impedance against a version in which the power-to-angle integrator is replaced by a proportional path would directly test whether the integrative action is load-bearing for the negative-resistance region near the fundamental.
Authors: We thank the referee for this concrete suggestion. In the revised manuscript we will introduce a reduced-order model in §3 in which the power-to-angle integrator is replaced by a pure proportional path. The impedance of this modified system exhibits neither the magnitude peak nor the negative-resistance region near the fundamental frequency, thereby demonstrating that the integrative action is the load-bearing element. We will also add a sensitivity study that varies both power-loop parameters and inner-loop bandwidths to confirm robustness of the result. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Quantitative index for exclusion bandwidth defined from impedance magnitude curve corners
specific steps
-
self definitional
[Abstract]
"Based on this insight, a quantitative index is proposed to determine the exclusion bandwidth from the corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve. The proposed index provides a concise and theoretically grounded criterion for voltage-source assessment and impedance standardization of GFM converters."
The corner frequencies mark the boundaries of the impedance magnitude rise and negative-resistance region that originate from the integrative power-to-angle mapping being explained; defining the exclusion bandwidth (the band to be excluded precisely because of those dynamics) as the span between those corners makes the index a direct re-measurement of the phenomenon rather than an independent criterion derived separately from first principles or external benchmarks.
full rationale
The paper's core derivation traces the impedance peak and negative-resistance region near the fundamental frequency to the integrative action in the active power control loop's power-to-angle mapping, derived via small-signal modeling of the GFM converter. This chain appears independent of the target result. However, the proposed quantitative index directly extracts the exclusion bandwidth from corner frequencies of the impedance magnitude curve, which are produced by the same power-control dynamics under explanation. This creates a self-referential assessment criterion. No self-citation chains, ansatz smuggling, or uniqueness theorems are load-bearing in the provided text. The central physical claim retains independent modeling content, limiting circularity to the index.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Mapping from power disturbance to synchronous angle in the active power control loop inherently contains an integrative action.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
B. Bahrani, M. H. Ravanji, B. Kroposki et al ., “Grid-Forming inverter- based resource research landscape: understanding the key assets for renewable-rich power systems,” IEEE Power Energy Mag. , vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 18-29, Mar./Apr. 2024
work page 2024
-
[2]
Descriptor State Space Modeling of Power Systems,
Y. Li, T. C. Green and Y. Gu, “Descriptor State Space Modeling of Power Systems,” IEEE Trans. Power Syst., vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 5495-5508, Jul. 2024
work page 2024
-
[3]
F. Chen, S. Khong, L. Harnefors et al ., “An Extended Frequency - Domain Passivity Theory for MIMO Dynamics Specifications of Voltage-Source Inverters,” IEEE Trans. Power Electron. , vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 2943-2957, Feb. 2025
work page 2025
-
[4]
Low -Frequency Resonances in Grid - Forming Converters: Causes and Damping Control,
F. Zhao, T. Zhu, Z. Li et al ., “Low -Frequency Resonances in Grid - Forming Converters: Causes and Damping Control,” IEEE Trans. Power Electron., vol. 39, no. 11, pp. 14430-14447, Nov. 2024
work page 2024
-
[5]
Small-Signal Stability Analysis of Inverter-Fed Power Systems Using Component Connection Method,
Y. Wang, X. Wang, Z. Chen et al ., “Small-Signal Stability Analysis of Inverter-Fed Power Systems Using Component Connection Method, ” IEEE Trans. Smart Grid, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 5301-5310, Sept. 2018
work page 2018
-
[6]
Y. Li, Y. Gu, Y. Zhu et al., “Impedance circuit model of grid -forming inverter: visualizing control algorithms as circuit elements,” IEEE Trans. Power Electron., vol. 36, no. 3, pp. 3377-3395, Mar. 2021
work page 2021
-
[7]
J. Wang, C. Wu, Q. Sun et al ., “Reshaping Reactive Power Control Loop to Suppress Sub -Synchronous Oscillation of Grid -Forming Converters at Low Power Levels,” J. Mod. Power Syst. Clean Energy , vol. 13, no. 5, pp. 1653-1663, Sept. 2025
work page 2025
-
[8]
J. Wang, C. Wu, Y. Wang et al., “Asymmetric Matrix Control Strategy for Suppression of Charging Mode Resonances in Grid -Forming Energy Storage Converters,” IEEE Trans. Power Electron. , vol. 41, no. 4, pp. 6079-6091, Apr. 2026
work page 2026
-
[9]
H. Xin, C. Liu, X. Chen et al., “How Many Grid -Forming Converters Do We Need? A Perspective From Small Signal Stability and Power Grid Strength, ” IEEE Trans. Power Syst. , vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 623 -635, Jan. 2025
work page 2025
-
[10]
Placing Grid-Forming Converters to Enhance Small Signal Stability of PLL -Integrated Power Systems,
C. Yang, L. Huang, H. Xin et al., “Placing Grid-Forming Converters to Enhance Small Signal Stability of PLL -Integrated Power Systems, ” IEEE Trans. Power Syst., vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 3563-3573, Jul. 2021
work page 2021
-
[11]
Great Britain Grid Forming Best Practice Guide ,
“Great Britain Grid Forming Best Practice Guide ,” National Grid Electricity System Operator (NGESO), Apr. 2023
work page 2023
-
[12]
Voluntary specification for grid -forming inverters,
“Voluntary specification for grid -forming inverters,” Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO), May. 2023
work page 2023
-
[13]
Frequency -coupled impedance modeling of virtual synchronous generators,
K. Shi, Y. Wang, Y. Sun et al ., “Frequency -coupled impedance modeling of virtual synchronous generators,” IEEE Trans. Power Syst. , vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 3692-3700, Jul. 2021
work page 2021
-
[14]
Y. Peng, Y. Wang, Y. Liu et al., “A full sequence impedance modelling and stability analysis of the virtual synchronous generator with inner loops,” IET Renew. Power Gener., vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 397-408, Feb. 2021
work page 2021
-
[15]
F. Han, X. Zhang, M. Li et al ., “Stability Control for Grid -Connected Inverters Based on Hybrid-Mode of Grid-Following and Grid-Forming,” IEEE Trans. Ind. Electron., vol. 71, no. 9, pp. 10750-10760, Sept. 2024
work page 2024
-
[16]
G. Li , Y. Chen, A. Luo et al ., “Analysis and Mitigation of Subsynchronous Resonance in Series -Compensated Grid -Connected System Controlled by a Virtual Synchronous Generator, ” IEEE Trans. Power Electron., vol. 35, no. 10, pp. 11096-11107, Oct. 2020
work page 2020
-
[17]
Sequence Impedance Characteristics of Grid-Forming Converter Controls,
M. Dokus and A. Mertens, “Sequence Impedance Characteristics of Grid-Forming Converter Controls, ” 2020 IEEE 11th International Symposium on Power Electronics for Distributed Generation Systems (PEDG), Dubrovnik, Croatia, 2020, pp. 413-420
work page 2020
-
[18]
Sequence Impedance Modeling of Grid -Forming Inverters,
W. Yan, S. Shah, V. Gevorgian et al., “Sequence Impedance Modeling of Grid -Forming Inverters, ” 2021 IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting (PESGM), Washington, DC, USA, 2021, pp. 1-5
work page 2021
-
[19]
“White Paper: Grid Forming Functional Specifications for BPS - Connected Battery Energy Storage Systems,” North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), Sept. 2023
work page 2023
-
[20]
Specific Study Requirements for Grid Energy Storage Systems,
“Specific Study Requirements for Grid Energy Storage Systems,” FINGRID, Jun. 2023
work page 2023
-
[21]
Technical specification for grid -forming power conversion system of electrochemical energy storage,
“Technical specification for grid -forming power conversion system of electrochemical energy storage,” Electric Energy Storage, Aug. 2025
work page 2025
-
[22]
UNIFI Specifications for Grid -Forming Inverter -Based Resources — Version 3
“UNIFI Specifications for Grid -Forming Inverter -Based Resources — Version 3”, Universal Interoperability for Grid -Forming Inverters (UNIFI) Consortium, Jan. 2026
work page 2026
-
[23]
“Testing the Performance of Grid -Forming Resources: Test Methods and Performance Metrics for Evaluating the Voltage Source Behavior of Grid-Forming Resources”, Energy Systems Integration Group (ESIG), Sept. 2025
work page 2025
-
[24]
Modeling and control of VSC -HVDC links connected to weak ac systems,
L. Zhang, “Modeling and control of VSC -HVDC links connected to weak ac systems,” Ph.D. disser tation, Dept. School Elect. Eng., Stockholm, Sweden, 2011
work page 2011
-
[25]
F. Zhao, X. Wang, and T. Zhu, “Low-frequency passivity-based analysis and damping of power -synchronization controlled grid-forming inverter,” IEEE Trans. Emerg. Sel. Top. Power Electron. , vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 1542 - 1554, Apr. 2023
work page 2023
-
[26]
Unified impedance model of grid-connected voltage -source converters,
X. Wang, L. Harnefors and F. Blaabjerg, “Unified impedance model of grid-connected voltage -source converters,” IEEE Trans. Power Electron., vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 1775-1787, Feb. 2018
work page 2018
-
[27]
L. Huang, C. Wu and D. Zhou, “A simplified SISO small -signal model for analyzing instability mechanism of grid -forming inverter under stronger grid,” 2021 IEEE 22nd Workshop on Control and Modelling of Power Electronics (COMPEL), Cartagena, Colombia, 2021, pp. 1-6
work page 2021
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.