I. Introduction
The drive to decarbonize electrical energy is progressing quickly around the world with large volumes of renewable capacity added each year [1], [2] and several systems that were fossil-fuel operating at times with more than half of production from renewable sources [3]–[6]. Several planning and operation challenges have had to be confronted to get to this point, and others remain to reach higher penetrations [7]. Many of those challenges relate to the variable nature of the resource of wind and solar, but other challenges relate to the inverters used to interface wind, solar, and battery systems to the grid [8]. These are known as an inverter-based resource (IBR) or converter interfaced generation (CIG).