118 research outputs found
PMSM Rotor Speed and Position Estimator
Estimation techniques have been developed for flux observer, rotor position, and speed. The techniques have a common problem of the offset in voltage-sensor and current-sensor outputs increasing during integration, causing instability. This paper describes an attempt to overcome the problem through estimations of rotor position and speed of a permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) by three methods: with cascaded low pass filter (LPF), with adaptive sensorless rotor flux observer, and with sliding mode observer (SMO). Simulation on Matlab/Simulink validated the proposed method. The advantages and drawbacks of each implementation are discussed
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High performance disturbance observer based control system design for permanent magnet synchronous AC machine applications
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University LondonAn electrical machine is one of the main workforces in different industries and serves them in various applications. Machine drive control design involves many technical issues for efficient and robust exploitation. Over several decades, Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor (PMSM) is getting preferred for industrial applications over its counterpart Squirrel Cage Induction Motor (SCIM) drive, because of their higher efficiency, power density, and higher torque to inertia ratio.
In the prospective that PMSM drives are considered the drives of the future, there are still technical challenges and issues related to PMSM control. Many studies have been devoted to PMSM control in the past, but there are still some open research areas that bring worldwide researchers’ interests back to PMSM drive control. One of the approaches that may facilitate better performance, higher efficiency, and robust and reliable work of the control system is the disturbance observer-based control (DOBC) with linear and nonlinear output feedback control for PM synchronous machine applications. DOBC is adopted due to its ability to reject external and internal disturbances with improving tracking performance in the variable speed wind energy conversion system (WECS) to maximize power extraction. The high order disturbance observer (HODO) is utilized to estimate the aerodynamic torque-based wind speed without the use of a traditional anemometer, which reduces the overall cost and improves the reliability of the whole system. Also, this method has been designed to improve the angular shaft speed tracking of the PMSM system under load torque disturbance and speed variations.
The model-based linear and nonlinear feedback control are used in the proposed control systems. The sliding mode control (SMC) with switching output feedback control law and integral SMC with linear feedback and state-dependent Riccati equation (SDRE) based approaches have been designed for the systems. The SDRE control accounts for the nonlinear multivariable structure of the WECS and is approximated with Taylor series expansion terms. The chattering inherited from SMC is eliminated by the continuous approximation technique. The sliding mode is guaranteed by eliminating the reaching mode in the proposed integral SMC. The model-free cascaded linear feedback control system based on the proportional-integral (PI) controllers use a back-calculation algorithm anti-windup scheme. The proposed speed controllers are synthesized with HODO to compensate for the external disturbance, model uncertainty, noise, and modelling errors. Moreover, servomechanism-based SDRE control, a near-optimal control system is designed to suppress the model uncertainty and noise without the use of disturbance observers.
The proposed control systems for PMSM speed regulation have demonstrated a significant improvement in the angular shaft speed-tracking performance at the transients. Their performances have been tested under speed, load torque variations, and model uncertainty. For example, HODO-based SMC with switching output feedback control law (SOFCL) has demonstrated improvement by more than 78% than the PI-PI control system of the PMSM. The performance of the HODOs-based Integral SMC with SDRE nonlinear feedback is improved by 80.5% under external disturbance, model uncertainty, and noise than Integral SMC with linear feedback in the WECS. The HODO-based SDRE control with servomechanism has shown an 80.2% improvement of mean absolute percentage error under disturbances than Integral SMC with linear feedback in the WECS. The PMSM speed tracking performance of the proposed HODO-based discrete-time PI-PI control system with back-calculation algorithm anti-windup scheme is improved by 87.29% and 90.2% in the speed commands and load torque disturbance variations scenarios respectively. The simulations for testing the proposed control system of the PMSM system and WECS have been implemented in Matlab/Simulink environment. The PMSM speed control experimental results have been obtained with Lucas-Nuelle DSP-based rapid control prototyping kit.Center for International Program “Bolashak” of the Ministry of Education and Science Republic of Kazakhsta
RECENT TECHNIQUES ON OBSERVER DESIGN FOR DISTURBANCE ESTIMATION AND REJECTION IN PERMANENT MAGNET SYNCHRONOUS MOTORS
Permanent magnet synchronous machines (PMSMs) (either motor or generator) have
attracted attention of research community comparing to other types of AC machines
in the recent two decades. PMSMs are preferable than other AC machines in terms
of large power-factor, broad speed of operation, compact proportions, and effective
operation. Unfortunately, different sources of nonlinearities, model uncertainties,
and external perturbations determine severity in a design of accurate speed control
scheme for PMSMs. In the era of developing science and technologies, many advanced
control solutions are proposed to control PMSMs. Although new solutions show
their advantages comparing to traditional methods in terms of performance evaluation,
practical realization of those algorithms could require expensive hardware with high
computational capabilities. Furthermore, people in industry with less knowledge about
the motor control may experience difficulties in using such advanced controllers on
their own.
Traditional PI/PID control schemes still work as a major control technique in modern
industry, and in motor control as well. Numerous positive facts about the PI/PID
schemes make such superiority of these control schemes. Firstly, the PI/PID can be
implemented easily on most industrial software and hardware components. Secondly,
while its scheme has clear mechanism of operation, most industrial processes could be
controlled via the PI/PID scheme. These schemes are good in terms of small number
of parameters to tune and tuning process itself could be very straightforward. Finally,
implementation of the PI/PID controllers would require smaller time comparing to most
proposed complex control solutions.
It is studied that the traditional PI/PID controllers usually cannot deal with
unpredictable disturbances, which in turn leads to degraded performance of an overall
control system. Inspired by the advantages and widespread application of PI/PID
control structure in industry, we propose a disturbance observer based composite
control scheme which uses the PI-like controller for the feedback regulation and
disturbance observer for estimation of lumped disturbances presented in a PMSM
control system. Under this circumstance, this thesis work proposes three different
control solutions for PMSM such as High-order disturbance observer-based composite
control (HDOBCC), Disturbance rejection PI (DR-PI) control, and Hierarchical optimal
disturbance observer-based control (HODOBC). Furthermore, to deeply understand the
similarity and difference between the traditional disturbance observer-based control (DOBC) and active-disturbance rejection control (ADRC) schemes, this thesis also
presents results of unification of these two control approaches in the speed control of a
PMSM.
The HDOBCC as the first method proposed in this thesis is designed to improve
reference speed tracking performance of a PMSM under various operational conditions.
A structure of the HDOBCC comprises a fuzzy-PI controller in a feedback stabilization
part and novel high-order disturbance observer in a feedforward compensation part of
the speed control system. The proposed controller is designed based on the research
questions such as: firstly, although a fixed gain traditional PI controller is able to present
satisfactory performance at some extent, still it does not guarantee such performance
when sudden disturbances occur in a system; secondly, many disturbance observers
designed for a PMSM in literature consider only a load torque as a disturbance,
neglecting model uncertainties and parameter variations in design stage. Therefore, the
HDOBCC is proposed such that it utilizes a fuzzy approach to determine parameters of
the PI controller to overcome limitations of the fixed gain PI controller. Furthermore,
the proposed scheme includes a high-order disturbance observer, which estimates not
only the load torque, but also disturbances due to model uncertainties and parameter
variations. Moreover, extended simulation and experimental studies are conducted to
affirm performance of the HDOBCC under various form of the load torque. In addition
to commonly tested step form of a load torque, severe forms of the load torque such as
triangular form and sinusoidal form are tested with the proposed controller. Stability
analysis of the closed-loop HDOBCC system is further provided.
The next proposed method, DR-PI control, is designed by seeking answer for
questions such as: firstly, although the traditional DOBC scheme applied for PMSM
shows reasonable results in a PMSM control, its design can be limited to known actual
parameters of the PMSM. In practice, actual parameters are usually not available, hence
it could be hard to design the traditional DOBC in the absence of a plant information;
secondly, for tuning a PI controller the traditional Ziegler-Nichols tuning approach still
remains as one of the popular tuning approaches, however it does not give a rigorous
explanation on selection of parameters during its design. Consequently, to answer these
questions, the DR-PI control is designed for the PMSM speed control. The DR-PI
control is designed such that it has a simple PI-like structure with intrinsic disturbance
rejection mechanism determined by the parameters of a filtering element, desired plant
model, and desired closed-loop system. Simulation and experimental validations are
provided to validate the performance of the DR-PI. Furthermore, gain tuning mechanism
and stability analysis of the closed-loop DR-PI-based speed control are also presented.
The HODOBC scheme as a third proposed control scheme targets on the next
research questions as: first, parameters of the traditional PI controller are mostly
obtained by trial-and-error approach, which in turn may not guarantee satisfactory results; in a cascaded PMSM control, the outer speed loop performance highly depends
on the performance of the inner current loop. The well-tuned speed control loop may
degrade in performance, if the inner current loop is not tuned properly. To address
these questions, we propose the HODOBC scheme, which consists of optimal PIlike
controller in the feedback stabilization part and optimal extended-state observer
(ESO) in the disturbance compensation part. The proposed HODOBC showed better
performance when it is compared with other traditional controllers via experiments.
Stability analysis is provided via the root locus approach.
The study on unification of the DOBC and ADRC schemes has the following research
question: the DOBC and ADRC are both used in estimation of total disturbance, but
these two schemes are considered differently in literature. Hence, the study of both
scheme is conducted to show the condition at which these two schemes show identical
performance. The analysis of the traditional DOBC and ADRC schemes concludes that
both scheme are equivalent in terms of performance characteristics if the dynamical
delays of disturbance observers in each scheme are same. The results of analysis reveal
that both scheme can be utilized to design a robust control system for PMSM, i.e.
once the gains of disturbance observers can be calculated under the DOBC framework,
further the disturbance rejection mechanism can be achieved via the ADRC framework.
The results of PMSM control with the proposed control schemes have been tested on
the Lucas-Nuelle DSP-based experimental setup
Control Strategies of DC–DC Converter in Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle
There is a significant need to research and develop a compatible controller for the DC–DC converter used in fuel cells electric vehicles (EVs). Research has shown that fuel cells (FC) EVs have the potential of providing a far more promising performance in comparison to conventional combustion engine vehicles. This study aims to present a universal sliding mode control (SMC) technique to control the DC bus voltage under varying load conditions. Additionally, this research will utilize improved DC–DC converter topologies to boost the output voltage of the FCs. A DC–DC converter with a properly incorporated control scheme can be utilized to regulate the DC bus voltage–. A conventional linear controller, like a PID controller, is not suitable to be used as a controller to regulate the output voltage in the proposed application. This is due to the nonlinearity of the converter. Furthermore, this thesis will explore the use of a secondary power source which will be utilized during the start–up and transient condition of the FCEV. However, in this instance, a simple boost converter can be used as a reference to step–up the fuel cell output voltage. In terms of application, an FCEV requires stepping –up of the voltage through the use of a high power DC–DC converter or chopper. A control scheme must be developed to adjust the DC bus or load voltage to meet the vehicle requirements as well as to improve the overall efficiency of the FCEV. A simple SMC structure can be utilized to handle these issues and stabilize the output voltage of the DC–DC converter to maintain and establish a constant DC–link voltage during the load variations. To address the aforementioned issues, this thesis presents a sliding mode control technique to control the DC bus voltage under varying load conditions using improved DC–DC converter topologies to boost and stabilize the output voltage of the FCs
Comparative Study of Sensorless Control Methods of PMSM Drives
Recently, permanent magnet synchronous motors (PMSMs) are increasingly used in high performance variable speed drives of many industrial applications. This is because the PMSM has many features, like high efficiency, compactness, high torque to inertia ratio, rapid dynamic response, simple modeling and control, and maintenance-free operation. In most applications, the presence of such a position sensor presents several disadvantages, such as reduced reliability, susceptibility to noise, additional cost and weight and increased complexity of the drive system. For these reasons, the development of alternative indirect methods for speed and position control becomes an important research topic. Many advantages of sensorless control such as reduced hardware complexity, low cost, reduced size, cable elimination, increased noise immunity, increased reliability and decreased maintenance. The key problem in sensorless vector control of ac drives is the accurate dynamic estimation of the stator flux vector over a wide speed range using only terminal variables (currents and voltages). The difficulty comprises state estimation at very low speeds where the fundamental excitation is low and the observer performance tends to be poor. The reasons are the observer sensitivity to model parameter variations, unmodeled nonlinearities and disturbances, limited accuracy of acquisition signals, drifts, and dc offsets. Poor speed estimation at low speed is attributed to data acquisition errors, voltage distortion due the PWM inverter and stator resistance drop which degrading the performance of sensorless drive. Moreover, the noises of system and measurements are considered other main problems. This paper presents a comprehensive study of the different methods of speed and position estimations for sensorless PMSM drives. A deep insight of the advantages and disadvantages of each method is investigated. Furthermore, the difficulties faced sensorless PMSM drives at low speeds as well as the reasons are highly demonstrated. Keywords: permanent magnet, synchronous motor, sensorless control, speed estimation, position estimation, parameter adaptation
Robust nonlinear generalized predictive control of a permanent magnet synchronous motor with an anti-windup compensator
This paper presents a robust nonlinear generalized
predictive control (RNGPC) strategy applied to a permanent
magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) for speed trajectory
tracking and disturbance rejection. The nonlinear predictive
control law is derived by using a newly defined design cost
function. The Taylor series expansion is used to carry out the
prediction in a finite horizon. No information about the
external perturbation and parameters uncertainties are needed
to ensure the robustness of the proposed RNGPC. Moreover,
to maintain the phase current within the limits using saturation
blocks, a cascaded structure is adopted and an anti-windup
compensator is proposed. The validity of the proposed control
strategy is implemented on a dSPACE DS1104 board driving in
real-time a 0.25 kW PMSM. Experimental results have
demonstrated the stability, robustness and the effectiveness of
the proposed control strategy regarding trajectory tracking
and disturbance rejection
Disturbance/uncertainty estimation and attenuation techniques in PMSM drives–a survey
This paper gives a comprehensive overview on
disturbance/uncertainty estimation and attenuation (DUEA) techniques in permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) drives.
Various disturbances and uncertainties in PMSM and also other alternating current (AC) motor drives are first reviewed which shows they have different behaviors and appear in different control loops of the system. The existing DUEA and other relevant control methods in handling disturbances and uncertainties widely used in PMSM drives, and their latest developments are then discussed and summarized. It also provides in-depth analysis of the relationship between these advanced control methods in the context of PMSM systems. When dealing with uncertainties,it is shown that DUEA has a different but complementary mechanism to widely used robust control and adaptive control. The similarities and differences in disturbance attenuation of DUEA and other promising methods such as internal model
control and output regulation theory have been analyzed in detail. The wide applications of these methods in different AC
motor drives (in particular in PMSM drives) are categorized and summarized. Finally the paper ends with the discussion on future
directions in this area
Control of synchronous motor drives with an LC filter
Electric motors can experience voltage stress over the motor terminals due to the short rise time of the voltage pulse at the inverter output and the impedance mismatch between the lead cables and the motor. This overvoltage degrades the motor insulation, thus reducing the motor lifespan. The problems can be avoided by using a sinusoidal LC filter in the inverter output, limiting the overvoltage and dampening high-order harmonics. However, the existing control methods for LC-filtered synchronous motors are infeasible for plug-and-play drives, in which the motor data or user input are not required. This is because the methods either contain several cascaded control loops, require cumbersome parameter tuning, are sensitive to parameter errors, or the range of operating speeds is limited. Nevertheless, recently developed observer-based volts-per-hertz control shows advantages through relatively low sensitivity to parameter errors, simplicity and generality of the control algorithm, and reliance on common control gains for all synchronous motor types. These attributes indicate that the observer-based volts-per-hertz control can be used for medium-performance drives ensuring robust and stable operation at a wide range of speeds. This thesis develops observer-based volts-per-hertz control for synchronous motor drives with an LC filter. The two designed methods are based on two different observer types (reduced-order and full-order) with two state feedback control laws. The methods are further linearized by means of small-signal linearization, the control strategies are simulated in Simulink, and experimental measurements validate the simulations. The measurement results show a satisfactory performance of the permanent magnet synchronous motor with both methods. However, the control performance of the synchronous reluctance motor is poor when the full-order observer is used. The thesis subsequently provides several suggestions for future work improvements
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