Hi, I’m after some information on how renewable energy inverters (solar, wind) remain on frequency and in phase with a grid load. Wikipedia doesn’t go deep enough for what I’m after. Presumably the principle of operation is that when feeding a substantial grid, the inverter output won’t be able to substantially affect the connected waveform, so problems with feedback instability aren’t significant. Is it as simple as a programmed device such as a micro or an FPGA detecting the + and – crossing points following a small amount of filtering, and using this to synthesize the pattern of switching signals that generate the chopped waveform, based on the required output power level? Or is something more sophisticated involved, such as a PLL that generates a tracking waveform that’s then used for controlling the output switching?
If there's a such a thing as a device that does all this, a type number would be useful, the datasheet will tell all. Thanks for any info.