4 research outputs found

    Power network transient stability electronics emulator using mixed-signal calibration

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    The emerging field of power system emulation for real time smart grid management is very demanding in terms of speed and accuracy. This paper provides detailed information about the electronics calibration process of a high-speed power network emulator dedicated to the transient stability analysis of power systems. This emulator uses mixed-signal hardware to model the dynamic behavior of a power network. Special design allows the self-calibration of the analog electronics through successive measurements and correction steps. The calibration operation guarantees high resolution of the transient stability analysis results, so that they can be reliably used for operational planning and control on real power networks

    Pipelined Numerical Integration on Reduced Accuracy Architectures for Power System Transient Simulations

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    This work concerns a dedicated mixed-signal power system dynamic simulator. The equations that describe the behavior of a power system can be decoupled in a large linear system that is handled by the analog part of the hardware, and a set of differential equations. The latter are solved using numerical integration algorithms implemented in dedicated pipelines on a field programmable gate array (FPGA). This data path is operating in a precision-starved environment since is it synthesized using fixed-point arithmetic, as well as it relies on low-precision solutions that come from the analog linear solver. In this paper, the pipelined integration scheme is presented and an assessment of different numerical integration algorithms is performed based on their effect on the final results. It is concluded that in low-precision environments higher order integration algorithms should be preferred when the time step is large, since simpler algorithms result in unacceptable artifacts (extraneous instabilities)

    A low-voltage CMOS-compatible time-domain photodetector, device & front end electronics

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    During the last decades, the usage of silicon photodetectors, both as stand-alone sensor or integrated in arrays, grew tremendously. They are now found in almost any application and any market range, from leisure products to high-end scientific apparatuses, including, among others, industrial, automotive, and medical equipment. The impressive growth in photodetector applications is closely linked to the development of CMOS technology, which now offers inexpensive and efficient analog and digi-tal signal processing capabilities. Detectors are often integrated with their respective front end and application-specific digital circuit on the same silicon die, forming complete systems on chip. In some cases the detector itself is not on the same chip but often part of the same package. However, this trend of co-integration of analog front end and digital circuits complicates the design of the analog part. The ever-decreasing supply voltage and the smaller transistors in advanced processes (which are driven by the development of digital cir-cuits) negatively impact the performance of the analog structures and complicates their design. For photodetector systems, the effect most importantly translates into a degradation of dynamic range and signal-to-noise ratio. One way to circumvent the problem of low supply voltages is to shift the operation from voltage domain to time domain. By doing so, the signal is no longer constrained by the supply rails and analog amplification is avoided. The signal takes the form of a time-based modulation, such as pulse-width modulation or pulse-frequency modulation. Another advantage is that the output signal of a time-domain photodetection system is directly interfaceable with digital circuits. In this work, a new type of CMOS-compatible photodetector displaying intrinsic light-to-time conversion is proposed. Its physical structure consists of a MOS gate interleaved with a PN junction. The MOS structure is acting as a photogate. The depletion region shrinks when photogenerated carriers fill the potential well. At some point, the anode of the PN structure is de-isolated from the rest of the detector and triggers a positive-feedback effect that leads to a very steep current increase through the PN-junction. This translates into a signal of very high amplitude and independent from light-intensity, which can be almost directly interfaced with digital circuits. This simplifies the front end circuit compared to photodiode-based systems. The physical behavior of the device is analyzed with the help of TCAD simulations and simple behavioral and shot-noise models are proposed. The device has been co-integrated with its driver and front end circuit in a standard CMOS process and its characteristics have been measured with a custom-made measurement system. The effect of bias parameters on the performance of the sensor are also analyzed. The limitations of the device are discussed, the most important ones being dark current and linearity. Techno-logical solutions, such as the implementation of the detector on Silicon-on-Insulator technology, are proposed to overcome the limitations. Finally, some application demonstrators have been realized. Other applications that could benefit from the detector are suggested, such as digital applications taking advantage of the latching behavior of the device, and a Photoplethysmography (PPG) system that uses a PLL-based control loop to minimize the emitting LED-current

    A mixed-signal computer architecture and its application to power system problems

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    Radical changes are taking place in the landscape of modern power systems. This massive shift in the way the system is designed and operated has been termed the advent of the ``smart grid''. One of its implications is a strong market pull for faster power system analysis computing. This work is concerned in particular with transient simulation, which is one of the most demanding power system analyses. This refers to the imitation of the operation of the real-world system over time, for time scales that cover the majority of slow electromechanical transient phenomena. The general mathematical formulation of the simulation problem includes a set of non-linear differential algebraic equations (DAEs). In the algebraic part of this set, heavy linear algebra computations are included, which are related to the admittance matrix of the topology. These computations are a critical factor to the overall performance of a transient simulator. This work proposes the use of analog electronic computing as a means of exceeding the performance barriers of conventional digital computers for the linear algebra operations. Analog computing is integrated in the frame of a power system transient simulator yielding significant computational performance benefits to the latter. Two hybrid, analog and digital computers are presented. The first prototype has been implemented using reconfigurable hardware. In its core, analog computing is used for linear algebra operations, while pipelined digital resources on a field programmable gate array (FPGA) handle all remaining computations. The properties of the analog hardware are thoroughly examined, with special attention to accuracy and timing. The application of the platform to the transient analysis of power system dynamics showed a speedup of two orders of magnitude against conventional software solutions. The second prototype is proposed as a future conceptual architecture that would overcome the limitations of the already implemented hardware, while retaining its virtues. The design space of this future architecture has been thoroughly explored, with the help of a software emulator. For one possible suggested implementation, speedups of four orders of magnitude against software solvers have been observed for the linear algebra operations
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