2,587 research outputs found

    Fault-Tolerant Converter with a Modular Structure for HVDC Power Transmitting Applications

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    For the high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) power transmission system of offshore wind power, dc/dc converters are the potential solution to collect the power generated by off-shore wind farms to HVDC terminals. The converters operate with high-voltage gain, high efficiency, and fault tolerance over a wide range of operating conditions. In this paper, an isolated ultrahigh step-up dc/dc converter with a scalable modular structure is proposed for HVDC offshore wind power collection. A flyback-forward converter is employed as the power cell to form the expandable electrically isolated modular dc/dc converter. The duty ratio and phase-shift angle control are also developed for the proposed converter. Fault-tolerant characteristics of the converter are illustrated through the redundancy operation and fault-ride-through tests. Redundancy operation is designed to maintain high operation efficiency of the converters and fault-ride-through operation improves the converter reliability under harsh operating conditions. Analytical studies are carried out, and a 750-W prototype with three modular cells is built and experimentally tested to verify the performance of the proposed modular dc/dc converter

    DC/DC converter for offshore DC collection network

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    Large wind farms, especially large offshore wind farms, present a challenge for the electrical networks that will provide interconnection of turbines and onward transmission to the onshore power network. High wind farm capacity combined with a move to larger wind turbines will result in a large geographical footprint requiring a substantial sub-sea power network to provide internal interconnection. While advanced HVDC transmission has addressed the issue of long-distance transmission, internal wind farm power networks have seen relatively little innovation. Recent studies have highlighted the potential benefits of DC collection networks. First with appropriate selection of DC voltage, reduced losses can be expected. In addition, the size and weight of the electrical plant may also be reduced through the use of medium- or high-frequency transformers to step up the generator output voltage for connection to a medium-voltage network suitable for wide-area interconnection. However, achieving DC/DC conversion at the required voltage and power levels presents a significant challenge for wind-turbine power electronics.This thesis first proposes a modular DC/DC converter with input-parallel output-series connection, consisting of full-bridge DC/DC modules. A new master-slave control scheme is developed to ensure power sharing under all operating conditions, including during failure of a master module by allowing the status of master module to be reallocated to another healthy module. Secondly, a novel modular DC/DC converter with input-series-input-parallel output-series connection is presented. In addition, a robust control scheme is developed to ensure power sharing between practical modules even where modules have mismatched parameters or when there is a faulted module. Further, the control strategy is able to isolate faulted modules to ensure fault ride-through during internal module faults, whilst maintaining good transient performance. The ISIPOS connection is then applied to a converter with bidirectional power flow capability, realised using dual-active bridge modules.The small- and large-signal analyses of the proposed converters are performed in order to deduce the control structure for the converter input and output stages. Simulation and experimental results demonstrate and validate the proposed converters and associated control schemes.Large wind farms, especially large offshore wind farms, present a challenge for the electrical networks that will provide interconnection of turbines and onward transmission to the onshore power network. High wind farm capacity combined with a move to larger wind turbines will result in a large geographical footprint requiring a substantial sub-sea power network to provide internal interconnection. While advanced HVDC transmission has addressed the issue of long-distance transmission, internal wind farm power networks have seen relatively little innovation. Recent studies have highlighted the potential benefits of DC collection networks. First with appropriate selection of DC voltage, reduced losses can be expected. In addition, the size and weight of the electrical plant may also be reduced through the use of medium- or high-frequency transformers to step up the generator output voltage for connection to a medium-voltage network suitable for wide-area interconnection. However, achieving DC/DC conversion at the required voltage and power levels presents a significant challenge for wind-turbine power electronics.This thesis first proposes a modular DC/DC converter with input-parallel output-series connection, consisting of full-bridge DC/DC modules. A new master-slave control scheme is developed to ensure power sharing under all operating conditions, including during failure of a master module by allowing the status of master module to be reallocated to another healthy module. Secondly, a novel modular DC/DC converter with input-series-input-parallel output-series connection is presented. In addition, a robust control scheme is developed to ensure power sharing between practical modules even where modules have mismatched parameters or when there is a faulted module. Further, the control strategy is able to isolate faulted modules to ensure fault ride-through during internal module faults, whilst maintaining good transient performance. The ISIPOS connection is then applied to a converter with bidirectional power flow capability, realised using dual-active bridge modules.The small- and large-signal analyses of the proposed converters are performed in order to deduce the control structure for the converter input and output stages. Simulation and experimental results demonstrate and validate the proposed converters and associated control schemes

    Distributed energy resources in grid interactive AC microgrids

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    A Hybrid Method of Performing Electric Power System Fault Ride-Through Evaluations on Medium Voltage Multi-Megawatt Devices

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    This dissertation explores the design and analysis of a Hybrid Method of performing electrical power system fault ride-through evaluations on multi-megawatt, medium voltage power conversion equipment. Fault ride-through evaluations on such equipment are needed in order to verify and validate full scale designs prior to being implemented in the field. Ultimately, these evaluations will help in reducing the deployment risks associated with bringing new technologies into the marketplace. This is especially true for renewable energy and utility scale energy storage systems, where a significant amount of attention in recent years has focused on their ever increasing role in power system security and stability. The Hybrid Method couples two existing technologies together - a reactive voltage divider network and a power electronic variable voltage source - in order to overcome the inherent limitation of both methods, namely the short circuit duty required for implementation. This work provides the background of this limitation with respect to the existing technologies and demonstrates that the Hybrid Method can minimize the fault duty required for fault evaluations. The physical system, control objectives, and operation cycle of the Hybrid Method are analyzed with respect to the overall objective of reducing the fault duty of the system. A vector controller is designed to incorporate the time variant nature of the Hybrid Method operation cycle, limit the fault current seen by the power electronic variable voltage source, and provide regulation of the voltage at the point of common coupling with the device being evaluated. In order to verify the operation of both the Hybrid Method physical system and vector controller, a controller hardware-in-the-loop experiment is created in order to simulate the physical system in real-time against the prototype implementation of the vector controller. The physical system is simulated in a Real Time Digital Simulator and is controlled with the Hybrid Method vector controller implemented on a National Instruments FPGA. In order to evaluate the complete performance of the Hybrid Method, both a synchronous generator and a doubly-fed induction generator are modeled as the device under test in the simulations of the physical system. Finally, the results of the controller hardware-in-the-loop experiments are presented which demonstrate that the Hybrid Method is a viable solution to performing fault ride-through evaluations on multi-megawatt, medium voltage power conversion equipment

    Recent Advances of Wind-Solar Hybrid Renewable Energy Systems for Power Generation: A Review

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    A hybrid renewable energy source (HRES) consists of two or more renewable energy sources, such as wind turbines and photovoltaic systems, utilized together to provide increased system efficiency and improved stability in energy supply to a certain degree. The objective of this study is to present a comprehensive review of wind-solar HRES from the perspectives of power architectures, mathematical modeling, power electronic converter topologies, and design optimization algorithms. Since the uncertainty of HRES can be reduced further by including an energy storage system, this paper presents several hybrid energy storage system coupling technologies, highlighting their major advantages and disadvantages. Various HRES power converters and control strategies from the state-of-the-art have been discussed. Different types of energy source combinations, modeling, power converter architectures, sizing, and optimization techniques used in the existing HRES are reviewed in this work, which intends to serve as a comprehensive reference for researchers, engineers, and policymakers in this field. This article also discusses the technical challenges associated with HRES as well as the scope of future advances and research on HRES

    Soft-Switched Step-Up Medium Voltage Power Converters

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    With a ten-year average annual growth rate of 19 percent, wind energy has been the largest source of new electricity generation for the past decade. Typically, an offshore wind farm has a medium voltage ac (MVac) grid that collects power from individual wind turbines. Since the output voltage of a wind turbine is too low (i.e., typically 400 690 V) to be connected to the MVac grid (i.e., 20 40 kV), a heavy line-frequency transformer is used to step up the individual turbines output voltage to the MV level. To eliminate the need for bulky MVac transformers, researchers are gravitating towards the idea of replacing the MVac grid with a medium voltage dc (MVdc) grid, so that MV step-up transformers are replaced by MV step-up power electronic converters that operate at the medium frequency range with much lower size and weight. This dissertation proposes a class of modular step-up transformerless MV SiC-based power converters with soft-switching capability for wind energy conversion systems with MVdc grid. This dissertation consists of two parts: the first part focuses on the development of two novel groups of step-up isolated dc-dc MV converters that utilize various step-up resonant circuits and soft-switched high voltage gain rectifier modules. An integrated magnetic design approach is also presented to combine several magnetic components together in the modular high voltage gain rectifiers. The second part of this dissertation focuses on the development of several three-phase ac-dc step-up converters with integrated active power factor correction. In particular, a bridgeless input ac-dc rectifier is also proposed to combine with the devised step-up transformerless dc-dc converters (presented in the first part) to form the three-phase soft-switched ac-dc step-up voltage conversion unit. In each of the presented modular step-up converter configurations, variable frequency control is used to regulate the output dc voltage of each converter module. The operating principles and characteristics of each presented converter are provided in detail. The feasibility and performance of all the power converter concepts presented in this dissertation are verified through simulation results on megawatts (MW) design examples, as well as experimental results on SiC-based laboratory-scale proof-of-concept prototypes

    Soft-Switched Step-Up Medium Voltage Power Converters

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    With a ten-year average annual growth rate of 19 percent, wind energy has been the largest source of new electricity generation for the past decade. Typically, an offshore wind farm has a medium voltage ac (MVac) grid that collects power from individual wind turbines. Since the output voltage of a wind turbine is too low (i.e., typically 400 690 V) to be connected to the MVac grid (i.e., 20 40 kV), a heavy line-frequency transformer is used to step up the individual turbines output voltage to the MV level. To eliminate the need for bulky MVac transformers, researchers are gravitating towards the idea of replacing the MVac grid with a medium voltage dc (MVdc) grid, so that MV step-up transformers are replaced by MV step-up power electronic converters that operate at the medium frequency range with much lower size and weight. This dissertation proposes a class of modular step-up transformerless MV SiC-based power converters with soft-switching capability for wind energy conversion systems with MVdc grid. This dissertation consists of two parts: the first part focuses on the development of two novel groups of step-up isolated dc-dc MV converters that utilize various step-up resonant circuits and soft-switched high voltage gain rectifier modules. An integrated magnetic design approach is also presented to combine several magnetic components together in the modular high voltage gain rectifiers. The second part of this dissertation focuses on the development of several three-phase ac-dc step-up converters with integrated active power factor correction. In particular, a bridgeless input ac-dc rectifier is also proposed to combine with the devised step-up transformerless dc-dc converters (presented in the first part) to form the three-phase soft-switched ac-dc step-up voltage conversion unit. In each of the presented modular step-up converter configurations, variable frequency control is used to regulate the output dc voltage of each converter module. The operating principles and characteristics of each presented converter are provided in detail. The feasibility and performance of all the power converter concepts presented in this dissertation are verified through simulation results on megawatts (MW) design examples, as well as experimental results on SiC-based laboratory-scale proof-of-concept prototypes

    Power-electronic systems for the grid integration of renewable energy sources: a survey

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    The use of distributed energy resources is increasingly being pursued as a supplement and an alternative to large conventional central power stations. The specification of a powerelectronic interface is subject to requirements related not only to the renewable energy source itself but also to its effects on the power-system operation, especially where the intermittent energy source constitutes a significant part of the total system capacity. In this paper, new trends in power electronics for the integration of wind and photovoltaic (PV) power generators are presented. A review of the appropriate storage-system technology used for the integration of intermittent renewable energy sources is also introduced. Discussions about common and future trends in renewable energy systems based on reliability and maturity of each technology are presented

    Soft-Switched Step-Up Medium Voltage Power Converters

    Get PDF
    With a ten-year average annual growth rate of 19 percent, wind energy has been the largest source of new electricity generation for the past decade. Typically, an offshore wind farm has a medium voltage ac (MVac) grid that collects power from individual wind turbines. Since the output voltage of a wind turbine is too low (i.e., typically 400 690 V) to be connected to the MVac grid (i.e., 20 40 kV), a heavy line-frequency transformer is used to step up the individual turbines output voltage to the MV level. To eliminate the need for bulky MVac transformers, researchers are gravitating towards the idea of replacing the MVac grid with a medium voltage dc (MVdc) grid, so that MV step-up transformers are replaced by MV step-up power electronic converters that operate at the medium frequency range with much lower size and weight. This dissertation proposes a class of modular step-up transformerless MV SiC-based power converters with soft-switching capability for wind energy conversion systems with MVdc grid. This dissertation consists of two parts: the first part focuses on the development of two novel groups of step-up isolated dc-dc MV converters that utilize various step-up resonant circuits and soft-switched high voltage gain rectifier modules. An integrated magnetic design approach is also presented to combine several magnetic components together in the modular high voltage gain rectifiers. The second part of this dissertation focuses on the development of several three-phase ac-dc step-up converters with integrated active power factor correction. In particular, a bridgeless input ac-dc rectifier is also proposed to combine with the devised step-up transformerless dc-dc converters (presented in the first part) to form the three-phase soft-switched ac-dc step-up voltage conversion unit. In each of the presented modular step-up converter configurations, variable frequency control is used to regulate the output dc voltage of each converter module. The operating principles and characteristics of each presented converter are provided in detail. The feasibility and performance of all the power converter concepts presented in this dissertation are verified through simulation results on megawatts (MW) design examples, as well as experimental results on SiC-based laboratory-scale proof-of-concept prototypes

    Power Electronic Converter Configuration and Control for DC Microgrid Systems

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