88 research outputs found

    The Essential Role and the Continuous Evolution of Modulation Techniques for Voltage-Source Inverters in the Past, Present, and Future Power Electronics

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    The cost reduction of power-electronic devices, the increase in their reliability, efficiency, and power capability, and lower development times, together with more demanding application requirements, has driven the development of several new inverter topologies recently introduced in the industry, particularly medium-voltage converters. New more complex inverter topologies and new application fields come along with additional control challenges, such as voltage imbalances, power-quality issues, higher efficiency needs, and fault-tolerant operation, which necessarily requires the parallel development of modulation schemes. Therefore, recently, there have been significant advances in the field of modulation of dc/ac converters, which conceptually has been dominated during the last several decades almost exclusively by classic pulse-width modulation (PWM) methods. This paper aims to concentrate and discuss the latest developments on this exciting technology, to provide insight on where the state-of-the-art stands today, and analyze the trends and challenges driving its future

    High Performance Multicell Series Inverter-Fed Induction Motor Drive

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: M. Khodja, D. Rahiel, M. B. Benabdallah, H. Merabet Boulouiha, A. Allali, A. Chaker, and M. Denai, ‘High-performance multicell series inverter-fed induction motor drive’, Electrical Engineering, Vol. 99 (3): 1121-1137, September 2017. The final publication is available at Springer via DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00202-016-0472-4.The multilevel voltage-source inverter (VSI) topology of the series multicell converter developed in recent years has led to improved converter performance in terms of power density and efficiency. This converter reduces the voltage constraints between all cells, which results in a lower transmission losses, high switching frequencies and the improvement of the output voltage waveforms. This paper proposes an improved topology of the series multicell inverter which minimizes harmonics, reduces torque ripples and losses in a variable-speed induction motor drive. The flying capacitor multilevel inverter topology based on the classical and modified phase shift pulse width modulation (PSPWM, MPSPWM) techniques are applied in this paper to minimize harmonic distortion at the inverter output. Simulation results are presented for a 2-kW induction motor drive and the results obtained demonstrate reduced harmonics, improved transient responses and reference tracking performance of the voltage in the induction motor and consequently reduced torque ripplesPeer reviewe

    Analytical Design and Performance Validation of Finite Set MPC Regulated Power Converters

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    Supervised imitation learning of finite set model predictive control systems for power electronics

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    Improving energy capture and power quality of power electronic connected generation

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    Power electronic converter is a significant intermediate media for electric renewable energy systems when integrated into the utility grid. Renewable energy systems such as wind, solar and wave energy systems usually operate with irregular natural energy sources. Advanced energy conversion interfaces are therefore highly desirable for stable power supply, good system reliability and high energy extraction efficiency. This thesis investigates the power generation and conversion systems, with the concentrations on the long-term operation cost, full-power-range efficiency and power quality of power electronic converters, for wind, solar and wave energy applications. The story starts with a hybrid wind-solar energy system design targeting at improving energy yield and system reliability. Wind energy and solar energy, as two complementary energy resources, are combined in a single energy system that features improved energy supply stability and reduced energy storage requirement. Special adaptive energy extraction maximisation algorithms are developed for energy generators in order to increase the energy extraction efficiency. The overall energy cogeneration system can offer high productivity and robustness under varying weather conditions. In the second part of this thesis, a bidirectional DC-AC converter based on the well-established Silicon (Si) based two-level circuit and the emerging Silicon Carbide (SiC) based three-level circuit is investigated, with the motivation to enhance the full-power-range efficiency in renewable energy generation and conversion systems. The SiC based circuit is advantageous especially under low-power conditions due to its low switching losses. The costs of power electronics, especially the power semiconductor devices, are taken into account. The Si based circuit provides a more cost-effective option and lower conduction losses under high-power conditions to further improve the overall energy conversion efficiency. All these benefits are integrated in a single converter called hybrid level-matching (HLM) converter, which is comprised of parallel-connected SiC and Si based circuits. A model predictive control (MPC) algorithm is developed to assist the switching state selection for minimised power losses across the full power range. The proposed HLM converter shows similar power control quality and better full-power-range efficiency compared to its conventional counterparts. The operation of the HLM converter under the proposed MPC controller is experimentally verified by a lab-scale demonstrator. The final part of this thesis focuses on the control of an existing flying capacitor based multilevel converter known as stacked multicell converter (SMC). Considered as a superior DC-AC converter candidate in renewable energy standalone load applications, SMC can be controlled under different capacitor voltage ratios to increase the output voltage resolution. This is studied to explore the potential to improve power control quality within the same SMC circuit by applying different capacitor voltage set-points. The capacitor voltage balancing and the basic three-phase current control are achieved by means of a space vector based MPC algorithm. A method to reduce the computational burden by shrinking the space vector candidate size is proposed. The trade-off between capacitor voltage balancing and current reference tracking poses a major challenge to the SMC in its flexibility in capacitor voltage ratio choice. This is investigated in detail to verify the feasibility to reduce load harmonic distortion by modifying the traditional capacitor voltage ratio in a SMC with three stacked cells

    Model Predictive Control for Power Converters and Drives: Advances and Trends

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    Model predictive control (MPC) is a very attractive solution for controlling power electronic converters. The aim of this paper is to present and discuss the latest developments in MPC for power converters and drives, describing the current state of this control strategy and analyzing the new trends and challenges it presents when applied to power electronic systems. The paper revisits the operating principle of MPC and identifies three key elements in the MPC strategies, namely the prediction model, the cost function, and the optimization algorithm. This paper summarizes the most recent research concerning these elements, providing details about the different solutions proposed by the academic and industrial communitiesMinisterio de Economia y Competitividad TEC2016-78430-RConsejeria de Innovacion, Ciencia y Empresa (Junta de Andalucia) P11-TIC-707

    Cascade-Free Model Predictive Control for Single-Phase Grid-Connected Power Converters

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    © 1982-2012 IEEE. In a conventional finite control set model predictive control (FCS-MPC) formulation, active and reactive power control loops rely on the predictive controller, whereas the dc-bus voltage is usually governed by a PI-based control loop. This originates from fact that the dynamic equations for describing the predictions of these variables are heavily coupled. In this paper, a cascade-free FCS-MPC for single-phase grid-connected power converters is presented. The proposed control algorithm is formulated in terms of established dynamic references design, which was originally proposed to directly govern active and reactive power, and dc-voltage in three-phase power converters. In this paper, the dynamic reference design concept is extended to control single-phase grid-connected power converters. The proposed control algorithm does not use instantaneous ac-power calculations; instead, it directly formulates the optimal control problem on the grid-current in the original stationary reference frame. The experimental results obtained with a single-phase grid-connected neutral point clamped (NPC) converter confirm a successful design, where system constraints, e.g., maximum power and weighted switching frequency, are easily taken into account
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