6,183 research outputs found

    Frequency adaptive repetitive control of grid-connected inverters

    Get PDF
    Grid-connected inverters (GCI) are widely used to feed power from renewable energy distributed generators into smarter grids. Repetitive control (RC) enables such inverters to inject high quality fundamental-frequency sinusoidal currents into the grid. However, digital RC which can get approximately zero tracking error of any periodic signal with known integer period in steady-state, cannot exactly track or reject periodic signal of frequency variations. Thus digital RC would lead to a significant power quality degradation of GCIs when grid frequency varies and causes periodic signal with non-integer periods. In this research paper a frequency adaptive repetitive control scheme (FARC) at a predefined sampling rate is proposed to deal with all types of periodic signal of variable frequency. A fractional delay filter which is based on Lagrange interpolation is used to estimate the fractional period terms in RC. This proposed FARC controller offers the fast, during process modification of fractional delay and fast revise of filter parameters, and then provides GCIs with a simple but very accurate real-time frequency adaptive control solution to the injection of high quality sinusoidal current under grid frequency variations. A case study a three-phase GCI is conducted to testify the validity of the proposed strategy

    Digital Filters

    Get PDF
    The new technology advances provide that a great number of system signals can be easily measured with a low cost. The main problem is that usually only a fraction of the signal is useful for different purposes, for example maintenance, DVD-recorders, computers, electric/electronic circuits, econometric, optimization, etc. Digital filters are the most versatile, practical and effective methods for extracting the information necessary from the signal. They can be dynamic, so they can be automatically or manually adjusted to the external and internal conditions. Presented in this book are the most advanced digital filters including different case studies and the most relevant literature

    Recent Advances in Variable Digital Filters

    Get PDF
    Variable digital filters are widely used in a number of applications of signal processing because of their capability of self-tuning frequency characteristics such as the cutoff frequency and the bandwidth. This chapter introduces recent advances on variable digital filters, focusing on the problems of design and realization, and application to adaptive filtering. In the topic on design and realization, we address two major approaches: one is the frequency transformation and the other is the multi-dimensional polynomial approximation of filter coefficients. In the topic on adaptive filtering, we introduce the details of adaptive band-pass/band-stop filtering that include the well-known adaptive notch filtering

    Digital Filters and Signal Processing

    Get PDF
    Digital filters, together with signal processing, are being employed in the new technologies and information systems, and are implemented in different areas and applications. Digital filters and signal processing are used with no costs and they can be adapted to different cases with great flexibility and reliability. This book presents advanced developments in digital filters and signal process methods covering different cases studies. They present the main essence of the subject, with the principal approaches to the most recent mathematical models that are being employed worldwide

    Truncated Binary Multipliers with minimum Mean Square Error: analytical characterization, circuit implementation and applications

    Get PDF
    In the wireless multimedia word, DSP systems are ubiquitous. DSP algorithms are computationally intensive and test the limits of battery life in portable device such as cell phones, hearing aids, MP3 players, digital video recorders and so on. Multiplication and squaring are the main operation in many signal processing algorithms (filtering, convolution, FFT, DCT, euclidean distance etc.), hence efficient parallel multipliers are desirable. A full-width digital nxn bits multiplier computes the 2n bits output as a weighted sum of partial products. A multiplier with the output represented on n bits output is useful, as example, in DSP datapaths which saves the output in the same n bits registers of the input. Note that the truncated multipliers are useful not only for DSP but also for digital, computational intensive, ASICs where the bit-widths at the output of the arithmetic blocks are chosen on the basis of system-related accuracy issues. Hence 2n bits of precision at the multiplier output are very often more than required. A truncated multiplier is an nxn multiplier with n bits output. Since in a truncated multiplier the n less-significant bits of the full-width product are discarded, some of the partial products are removed and replaced by a suitable compensation function, to trade-off accuracy with hardware cost. Several techniques have been proposed in the Literature following this basic idea. The difference between the various circuits is in the choice and the implementation of the compensation circuit. The correction techniques proposed in the Literature are obtained through exhaustive search. This means that the results are only available for small n values and that the proposed approach are not extendable to greater bit widths. Furthermore the analytical characterization of the error is not possible. In this dissertation an innovative solution for the design and characterization of truncated multipliers is presented. The proposed circuits are based on the analytical calculation of the error of the truncated multiplier. This approach allows to have the description of a multiplier characterized by a minimum mean square error which gives a fast and low power VLSI implementation. Furthermore the analytical approach yields to a closed form expression of the mean square error and maximum absolute error for the proposed truncated multipliers. In this way the a priori knowledge of the output error is available. The errors are known for every bit width of the multiplier and it is also possible to decide, for a given bit width, which correction circuit has to be used in order to obtain a certain error. This analytical relation between the error and the parameters of hardware implementation is extremely important for the digital designer, since now it is possible to select the suitable implementation as a function of the desired accuracy. Proposed truncated multipliers overcome the previously proposed truncated multipliers since provide lower error, lower power dissipation, lower area occupation and also provide higher working frequency. The circuits are also easily implemented and allow an automatic HDL description as a function of bit width and desired error. The complete description of the errors for the truncated multipliers allows the use of these circuits as building blocks for more complex systems. It will be shown how the proposed multiplier can be used to design low area occupation FIR filters and an efficient PI temperature controller

    Real-Time Digital Timing in Positron Emission Tomography

    Get PDF
    Positron emission tomography (PET) requires accurate timing of scintillation events to properly discriminate between coincident and noncoincident pairs. The traditional solution to timing is based on custom application specific integrated circuits (ASIC) designs, whose cost may not be justified in the design of experimental small animal PET scanners. The new generation of PET scanners introduces the idea of continuous sampling of the detected scintillation pulse, replacing event-triggered acquisition front-ends. This approach enables new options to the timing procedure based on digital processing of the sampled pulse signal. This work proposes a time stamping algorithm based on the optically matched filter and compares the potential performance benefits of this approach versus other FIR-based timing algorithms, some of which have been already implemented by different authors. Results show that the coincidence timing resolution may be as low as 1.5 ns without the need of expensive high-speed converters when the proper signal processing is appliedIEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences SocietyPublicad

    Re-Sonification of Objects, Events, and Environments

    Get PDF
    abstract: Digital sound synthesis allows the creation of a great variety of sounds. Focusing on interesting or ecologically valid sounds for music, simulation, aesthetics, or other purposes limits the otherwise vast digital audio palette. Tools for creating such sounds vary from arbitrary methods of altering recordings to precise simulations of vibrating objects. In this work, methods of sound synthesis by re-sonification are considered. Re-sonification, herein, refers to the general process of analyzing, possibly transforming, and resynthesizing or reusing recorded sounds in meaningful ways, to convey information. Applied to soundscapes, re-sonification is presented as a means of conveying activity within an environment. Applied to the sounds of objects, this work examines modeling the perception of objects as well as their physical properties and the ability to simulate interactive events with such objects. To create soundscapes to re-sonify geographic environments, a method of automated soundscape design is presented. Using recorded sounds that are classified based on acoustic, social, semantic, and geographic information, this method produces stochastically generated soundscapes to re-sonify selected geographic areas. Drawing on prior knowledge, local sounds and those deemed similar comprise a locale's soundscape. In the context of re-sonifying events, this work examines processes for modeling and estimating the excitations of sounding objects. These include plucking, striking, rubbing, and any interaction that imparts energy into a system, affecting the resultant sound. A method of estimating a linear system's input, constrained to a signal-subspace, is presented and applied toward improving the estimation of percussive excitations for re-sonification. To work toward robust recording-based modeling and re-sonification of objects, new implementations of banded waveguide (BWG) models are proposed for object modeling and sound synthesis. Previous implementations of BWGs use arbitrary model parameters and may produce a range of simulations that do not match digital waveguide or modal models of the same design. Subject to linear excitations, some models proposed here behave identically to other equivalently designed physical models. Under nonlinear interactions, such as bowing, many of the proposed implementations exhibit improvements in the attack characteristics of synthesized sounds.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Electrical Engineering 201

    Applications of MATLAB in Science and Engineering

    Get PDF
    The book consists of 24 chapters illustrating a wide range of areas where MATLAB tools are applied. These areas include mathematics, physics, chemistry and chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, biological (molecular biology) and medical sciences, communication and control systems, digital signal, image and video processing, system modeling and simulation. Many interesting problems have been included throughout the book, and its contents will be beneficial for students and professionals in wide areas of interest
    corecore