30,621 research outputs found
Power Quality Improvement Wind Energy System Using Cascaded Multilevel Inverter
In this paper, a wind energy conversion system based on a cascaded H-bridge multilevel inverter (CHBMLI) topology has been proposed to be used for the grid interface of large split winding alternators (SWAs). A new method has been suggested for the generation of reference currents for the voltage source inverter (VSI) depending upon the available wind power. The CHBMLI has been used as a VSI and operated in a current control mode order to achieve the objectives of real power injection and load compensation (power factor correction, load balancing, and harmonic compensation) based on the proposed reference generation scheme. In the field excitation control of SWA provides a single means vary the dc link voltages of all the CHBs simultaneously and proportionatel
Full- & Reduced-Order State-Space Modeling of Wind Turbine Systems with Permanent-Magnet Synchronous Generator
Wind energy is an integral part of nowadays energy supply and one of the
fastest growing sources of electricity in the world today. Accurate models for
wind energy conversion systems (WECSs) are of key interest for the analysis and
control design of present and future energy systems. Existing control-oriented
WECSs models are subject to unstructured simplifications, which have not been
discussed in literature so far. Thus, this technical note presents are thorough
derivation of a physical state-space model for permanent magnet synchronous
generator WECSs. The physical model considers all dynamic effects that
significantly influence the system's power output, including the switching of
the power electronics. Alternatively, the model is formulated in the -
and -reference frame. Secondly, a complete control and operation
management system for the wind regimes II and III and the transition between
the regimes is presented. The control takes practical effects such as input
saturation and integral windup into account. Thirdly, by a structured model
reduction procedure, two state-space models of WECS with reduced complexity are
derived: a non-switching model and a non-switching reduced-order model. The
validity of the models is illustrated and compared through a numerical
simulation study.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figure
Advanced Algorithms for Satellite Communication Signal Processing
Dizertační práce je zaměřena na softwarově definované přijímače určené k úzkopásmové družicové komunikaci. Komunikační kanály družicových spojů zahrnujících komunikaci s hlubokým vesmírem jsou zatíženy vysokými úrovněmi šumu, typicky modelovaného AWGN, a silným Dopplerovým posuvem signálu způsobeným mimořádnou rychlostí pohybu objektu. Dizertační práce představuje možné postupy řešení výpočetně efektivní digitální downkonverze úzkopásmových signálů a systému odhadu kmitočtu nosné úzkopásmových signálů zatížených Dopplerovým posuvem v řádu násobků šířky pásma signálu. Popis navrhovaných algoritmů zahrnuje analytický postup jejich vývoje a tam, kde je to možné, i analytické hodnocení jejich chování. Algoritmy jsou modelovány v prostředí MATLAB Simulink a tyto modely jsou využity pro ověření vlastností simulacemi. Modely byly také využity k experimentálním testům na reálném signálu přijatém z družice PSAT v laboratoři experimentálních družic na ústavu radioelektroniky.The dissertation is focused on software defined receivers intended for narrowband satellite communication. The satellite communication channel including deep space communication suffers from a high level of noise, typically modeled by AWGN, and from a strong Doppler shift of a signal caused by the unprecedented speed of an object in motion. The dissertation shows possible approaches to the issues of computationally efficient digital downconversion of narrowband signals and the carrier frequency estimation of narrowband signals distorted by the Doppler shift in the order of multiples of the signal bandwidth. The description of the proposed algorithms includes an analytical approach of its development and, if possible, the analytical performance assessment. The algorithms are modeled in MATLAB Simulink and the models are used for validating the performance by the simulation. The models were also used for experimental tests on the real signal received from the PSAT satellite at the laboratory of experimental satellites at the department of radio electronics.
Basics of RF electronics
RF electronics deals with the generation, acquisition and manipulation of
high-frequency signals. In particle accelerators signals of this kind are
abundant, especially in the RF and beam diagnostics systems. In modern machines
the complexity of the electronics assemblies dedicated to RF manipulation, beam
diagnostics, and feedbacks is continuously increasing, following the demands
for improvement of accelerator performance. However, these systems, and in
particular their front-ends and back-ends, still rely on well-established basic
hardware components and techniques, while down-converted and acquired signals
are digitally processed exploiting the rapidly growing computational capability
offered by the available technology. This lecture reviews the operational
principles of the basic building blocks used for the treatment of
high-frequency signals. Devices such as mixers, phase and amplitude detectors,
modulators, filters, switches, directional couplers, oscillators, amplifiers,
attenuators, and others are described in terms of equivalent circuits,
scattering matrices, transfer functions; typical performance of commercially
available models is presented. Owing to the breadth of the subject, this review
is necessarily synthetic and non-exhaustive. Readers interested in the
architecture of complete systems making use of the described components and
devoted to generation and manipulation of the signals driving RF power plants
and cavities may refer to the CAS lectures on Low-Level RF.Comment: 36 pages, contribution to the CAS - CERN Accelerator School:
Specialised Course on RF for Accelerators; 8 - 17 Jun 2010, Ebeltoft, Denmar
Data-driven online temperature compensation for robust field-oriented torque-controlled induction machines
Squirrel-cage induction machines (IMs) with indirect field-oriented control are widely used in industry and are frequently chosen for their accurate and dynamic torque control. During operation, however, temperature rises leading to changes in machine parameters. The rotor resistance, in particular, alters, affecting the accuracy of the torque control. The authors investigated the effect of a rotor resistance parameter mismatch in the control algorithm on the angular rotor flux misalignment and the subsequent deviation of stator currents and motor torque from their setpoints. Hence, an online, data-driven torque compensation to eliminate the temperature effect is proposed to enable robust torque-controlled IMs. A model-based analysis and experimental mapping of the temperature effect on motor torque is presented. A temperature-torque lookup-table is subsequently implemented within the control algorithm demonstrating the ability to reduce the detrimental effect of temperature on torque control. Experimental results on a 5.5 kW squirrel-cage induction motor show that the proposed data-driven online temperature compensation method is able to reduce torque mismatch when compared to having no temperature compensation. Up to 17% torque mismatch is reduced at nominal torque and even up to 23% at torque setpoints that are lower than 20% of the nominal torque. A limited torque error of <1% remains in a broad operating range
Orbital Angular Momentum Waves: Generation, Detection and Emerging Applications
Orbital angular momentum (OAM) has aroused a widespread interest in many
fields, especially in telecommunications due to its potential for unleashing
new capacity in the severely congested spectrum of commercial communication
systems. Beams carrying OAM have a helical phase front and a field strength
with a singularity along the axial center, which can be used for information
transmission, imaging and particle manipulation. The number of orthogonal OAM
modes in a single beam is theoretically infinite and each mode is an element of
a complete orthogonal basis that can be employed for multiplexing different
signals, thus greatly improving the spectrum efficiency. In this paper, we
comprehensively summarize and compare the methods for generation and detection
of optical OAM, radio OAM and acoustic OAM. Then, we represent the applications
and technical challenges of OAM in communications, including free-space optical
communications, optical fiber communications, radio communications and acoustic
communications. To complete our survey, we also discuss the state of art of
particle manipulation and target imaging with OAM beams
Unidirectional frequency conversion in microring resonators for on-chip frequency-multiplexed single-photon sources
Microring resonators are attractive for low-power frequency conversion via
Bragg-scattering four-wave-mixing due to their comb-like resonance spectrum.
However, conversion efficiency is limited to 50% due to the equal probability
of up- and down-conversion. Here, we demonstrate how two coupled microrings
enable highly directional conversion between the spectral modes of one of the
rings. An extinction between up- and down-conversion of more than 40 dB is
experimentally observed. Based on this method, we propose a design for on-chip
multiplexed single-photon sources that allow localized frequency modes to be
converted into propagating continuous-mode photon wave packets using a single
operation. The key is that frequency conversion works as a switch on both
spatial and spectral degrees of freedom of photons if the microring is
interferometrically coupled to a bus waveguide. Our numerical results show 99%
conversion efficiency into a propagating mode with a wave packet having a 90%
overlap with a Gaussian for a ratio between intrinsic and coupling quality
factors of 400
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