With the growing adoption of electric vehicles (EVs), vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology has emerged as an effective means to enhance grid flexibility through functions such as frequency regulation and peak shaving. However, the integration of a large number of power electronic devices via V2G has also raised serious concerns about grid stability. This paper first introduces the circuit configuration of a bidirectional V2G energy conversion system and proposes a novel converter equivalent circuit, i.e., Y-type and Z-type equivalence. A unified small-signal model of the V2G system is then established. From this model, the mathematical expressions for the AC bus current and DC bus voltage under various operating conditions are derived, leading to a common denominator factor, termed the generalized stability factor D(S). Unlike conventional methods that rely on Nyquist diagrams, the distribution of poles and zeros of D(S) is intuitively identified by analyzing its magnitude-frequency and phase-frequency characteristics. The existence of zeros in D(S) is used as the stability criterion for the system. Finally, a simulation model of a clustered V2G energy conversion system is developed. Through systematic reduction in the DC-side capacitance in four distinct operational scenarios, our simulations successfully predicted and validated the emergence of characteristic oscillations at 870 Hz, 730 Hz, 843 Hz, and 893 Hz. This demonstrates the efficacy of the proposed stability criterion across various operating conditions.
Zhou et al. (Mon,) studied this question.