15 research outputs found

    Control of power electronic interfaces in distributed generation.

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    Renewable energy has gained popularity as an alternative resource for electric power generation. As such, Distributed Generation (DG) is expected to open new horizons to electric power generation. Most renewable energy sources cannot be connected to the load directly. Integration of the renewable energy sources with the load has brought new challenges in terms of the system’s stability, voltage regulation and power quality issues. For example, the output power, voltage and frequency of an example wind turbine depend on the wind speed, which fluctuate over time and cannot be forecasted accurately. At the same time, the nonlinearity of residential electrical load is steadily increasing with the growing use of devices with rectifiers at their front end. This nonlinearity of the load deviates both current and voltage waveforms in the distribution feeder from their sinusoidal shape, hence increasing the Total Harmonics Distortions (THD) and polluting the grid. Advances in Power Electronic Interfaces (PEI) have increased the viability of DG systems and enhanced controllability and power transfer capability. Power electronic converter as an interface between energy sources and the grid/load has a higher degree of controllability compared to electrical machine used as the generator. This controllability can be used to not only overcome the aforementioned shortfalls of integration of renewable energy with the grid/load but also to reduce THD and improve the power quality. As a consequence, design of a sophisticated controller that can take advantage of this controllability provided by PEIs to facilitate the integration of DG with the load and generate high quality power has become of great interest. In this study a set of nonlinear controllers and observers are proposed for the control of PEIs with different DG technologies. Lyapunov stability analysis, simulation and experimental results are used to validate the effectiveness of the proposed control solution in terms of tracking objective and meeting the THD requirements of IEEE 519 and EN 50160 standards for US and European power systems, respectively

    Process Simulation of Technical Precipitation Processes - The Influence of Mixing

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    This work develops and shows up methods to tackle multi-scale challenges in particle formation during precipitation crystallization. Firstly, molecular, micro- and meso-scale interactions in confined impinging jet mixers are investigated and simulatively predicted. Secondly, to build up on developed methods, macroscale as present for instance in stirred tank reactors is added to the considerations

    Self-starting interior permanent magnet motor drive for electric submersible pumps

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    The interior permanent magnet (IPM) motor drive has evolved as the most energy efficient technology for modern motion control applications. Electric submersible pumps (ESPs) are electric motor driven fluid recovery systems. ESPs are widely used for producing oil and gas from deep downhole reservoirs. Standard ESPs are driven by classical squirrel cage induction motors (IMs) due to its self-starting capability from a balanced 3-phase ac excitation, ruggedness, simplicity, low cost and wide scale availability. Although there has been a tremendous growth in the design and development of highly efficient and reliable IPM motors for traction drive systems, application of the IPM motor technology in ESPs is still in its infancy due to challenges associated with the design and control of IPM motors. In this thesis, a new self-starting, efficient and reliable IPM motor drive technology is proposed for ESP systems to extend their efficiency, longevity and performance. This thesis investigates two different types of self-starting interior permanent magnet (IPM) motors: cage-equipped IPM motors known as line-start IPM motors and a new type of hybrid self-starting motors called hysteresis IPM motors. The limited synchronization capability of line-start IPM motors for high inertial loads is explained in this thesis. To overcome the starting and synchronization problems associated with line-start IPM motors, a new type of hybrid hysteresis IPM motor is proposed in this thesis. Equivalent circuit modeling and finite element analysis of hysteresis IPM motors are carried out in this thesis. A prototype 2.5 kW hysteresis IPM motor is constructed and experimentally tested in the laboratory. In order to limit the inrush current during starting, a stable soft starter has been designed, simulated and implemented for variable speed operations of the motor. The simulation and experimental results are presented and analyzed in this thesis. Self-starting IPM motors suffer from hunting induced torsional oscillations. Electric submersible pumps are vulnerable against sustained hunting and can experience premature failures. In this thesis, a novel stator current signature based diagnostic system for detection of torsional oscillations in IPM motor drives is proposed. The diagnostic system is non-intrusive, fast and suitable for remote condition monitoring of an ESP drive system. Finally, a position sensorless control technique is developed for an IPM motor drive operated from an offshore power supply. The proposed technique can reliably start and stabilize an IPM motor using a back-emf estimation based sensorless controller. The efficacy of the developed sensorless control technique is investigated for a prototype 3-phase, 6-pole, 480V, 10-HP submersible IPM motor drive. In summary, this thesis carried out modeling, analysis and control of different types of self-starting IPM motors to assess their viability for ESP drive systems. Different designs of self-starting IPM motors are presented in this thesis. In future, a fully scalable self-starting IPM motor drive will be designed and manufactured that can meet the industrial demands for high power, highly reliable and super-efficient ESP systems

    Advanced Inverter control for mixed source microgrids

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    This thesis focuses on investigating virtual oscillator control (VOC) and applying it to mixed source microgrids to address several stability issues. A detailed comparison between VOC and droop control in a three-phase system is presented in terms of transient responses of a single inverter under small load disturbances and the synchronization speed in multiple paralleled inverters under various inverter terminal voltage amplitude and frequency regulation settings. In the single-inverter microgrid, it is demonstrated in both simulation and experiment that the two control models produce similar transient responses in the output voltage and current amplitudes. However, VOC has a faster instantaneous frequency transient response whilst still maintaining the terminal voltage amplitude transient response of the droop controller. In microgrids with multiple inverters, the synchronization speed of the VOC is faster than that of the droop control when the terminal voltage’s frequency regulation range is allowed to be wide. The conclusion is verified with different types of loads. A virtual inertia design method for the VOC inverter with a mixed source microgrid is presented to improve the frequency stability issues of the system. The per unit inertia constant of a VOC inverter is derived when coupled with a synchronous generator in an islanded microgrid. The control parameters of the virtual inertia are designed via small-signal analysis. A dual second order generalized integrator - frequency locked loop (DSOGI-FLL) is adopted for digital implementation of proposed virtual inertia based VOC. With the use of virtual inertia block, the frequency nadir is improved by 22% and rate of change of frequency is improved by 29% compared with the unmodified VOC inverter during the transient period induced by load disturbances. Simulation and experimental results verify the enhanced transient response of system frequency. A voltage and current dual-loop control structure is added to the VOC inverter to solve the voltage drop issues at the inverter terminals caused by the inverter dead-time effects, non-ideal semiconductor and LCL filter. A complete small-signal model for a multiple-inverters microgrid with the proposed control structure is presented in order to assess system stability using eigenvalue and participation factor analysis. Analytical results show that the parameter related to the frequency regulation and the integral gain of the voltage controller affect the location of the system’s dominant modes significantly. The stability margin is determined by modifying these control parameters. Experimental results on a laboratory test microgrid verify the predication from the small-signal analysis and time-domain simulations. Finally, a method to limit current in the VOC inverter under large disturbances in a mixed source microgrid is proposed. During a large load change in the islanded microgrid, the inverter based sources may get temporarily overloaded until other generations with sufficient power margin take the remaining load burden. The original VOC inverter lacks the ability to constrain the current within limits during the transient period. The dual-loop structure proposed in this thesis can limit the transient current with the use of virtual impedance. Such virtual impedance is presented by the desired maximum current magnitude and virtual voltage drop. Compared with a recently proposed fault ride through VOC inverter, the proposed virtual impedance based current limitation method can effectively constrain the inverter current within the pre-set value under large disturbances, which augments the range of application of VOC and enhances its robustness

    Optimal control and approximations

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    Robust stabilization and observation of positive Takagi-Sugeno systems

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    Esta tesis propone metodologías para diseñar controladores robustos y observadores para los sistemas positivos descritos por modelos de Takagi-Sugeno (TS), lineal, inciertos, y tal vez con retraso. Las condiciones de síntesis se expresan como LMIs (desigualdades matriciales lineales). En la primera parte, se establecen las condiciones para garantizar la estabilización asintótica y la α-estabilización de los sistemas T-S lineales positivas y, tal vez afectados por incertidumbres de intervalo, usando controladores de retroalimentación de estado descompuestos. En la segunda parte, se dan las condiciones necesarias y suficientes para la estabilización de los sistemas de T-S positivos con retraso, en dos casos: cuando las variables de premisa del sistema son medibles o no. Además, el problema de diseño de control basado en observador es considerado, por las leyes de retroalimentación del estado que se pueden elegir con o sin memoria. Para mostrar la eficacia de los métodos propuestos, se proporcionan ejemplos numéricos y prácticos, dando resultados satisfactorios.Departamento de Ingeniería de Sistemas y Proceso
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