Converter-interfaced renewable generation predominates in the development of new power system architectures, particularly in offshore systems. The increase of such multi-converter systems leads to the introduction of a new interaction among the different elements of the system an
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Converter-interfaced renewable generation predominates in the development of new power system architectures, particularly in offshore systems. The increase of such multi-converter systems leads to the introduction of a new interaction among the different elements of the system and, therefore, new dynamic phenomena. Such phenomenon is subsynchronous and supersynchronous oscillations (SSO) which result, among other causes, from the interaction of converters with weak networks, such as offshore power systems. Various factors, including the challenge of obtaining analytical models from converter-based generation manufacturers and analysing system measurements during planning and operations, necessitate effective measurement-based methods for the swift and numerically trustworthy identification of various characteristics of SSO. Therefore, this paper analyses the advantages and disadvantages of the Dynamic Mode Decomposition method for identifying SSO. The theoretical background of the technique and the application algorithm are presented. The method is first applied to several synthetic signals exhibiting subsynchronous and supersynchronous modes under various conditions, including noise and different time windows. Then, a converted-based resource connected to an infinite bus is presented, and the method is applied to a group of recorded signals from this system under an external perturbation. This method is proposed as an alternative for analysing SSO in converted-based systems due to its ability to assess non-linear systems and its robustness against noise.