5 research outputs found

    Optimización de equilibradores de celdas de baterías basados en trampas de onda

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    XXIII Seminario Anual de Automática, Electrónica Industrial e Instrumentación 2015 (SAAEI’16), Elche (España)Los equilibradores activos presentan un mejor rendimiento respecto a los pasivos a cambio de un número de componentes más elevado. La aplicación del concepto de trampa de onda permite al equilibrador emplear la frecuencia como la variable de control que define la celda que debe ser cargada por el equilibrador en cada momento. Como consecuencia, el número de interruptores controlados se reduce drásticamente sin pérdida de prestaciones. En este artículo se plantea una guía de diseño optimizada para un equilibrador basado en trampas de onda. La optimización se logra definiendo la relación entre la energía inyectada por la trampa en la celda y la energía resonante presente en la misma. Este diseño optimizado se ha empleado en la implementación de un equilibrador de cuatro trampas basado en el medio puente asimétric

    Global Loss Evaluation Methods for Nonsinusoidally Fed Medium-Frequency Power Transformers

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    Medium-voltage conversion systems, such as traction and grid-connected converters, are continuously evolving toward higher power densities. Consequently, volume, weight, and material reductions are becoming major design issues, which lead the research focus toward high-/medium-frequency isolated power conversion systems. An optimized design of these conversion systems requires a detailed transformer-loss evaluation considering both copper and core losses. This paper presents a simple and flexible methodology to analyze global medium-frequency transformer losses in an isolated dc–dc converter fed by general nonsinusoidal waveforms. Various loss evaluation approaches are considered, pointing out their validity and limitations by means of finiteelement simulations and experimental tests

    Transient Thermal Model of a Medium Frequency Power Transformer

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    Nowadays medium voltage conversion systems, like traction and energy distribution systems, aim to increase power density. Volume, weight and material reduction are gaining the market today. Due to the development of new high power semi-conductor devices a new working frequency range is conceived, where magnetic component reduction is feasible. However, along with the reduction of magnetic component size, the cooling surface is reduced, increasing the equilibrium temperature of the magnetic components. The core element of these new conversion systems is the medium frequency power transformer. In this paper a dynamic thermal model is introduced, with equivalent non-linear temperature dependent thermal resistances. Besides, heat sources are determined taking into account non-sinusoidal excitations, and frequency dependent effects. For our case study, the model shows natural heat dissipation limits, pointing out the cooling requirements throughout the design process

    Analysis of Empirical Core Loss Evaluation Methods For Non-Sinusoidally Fed Medium Frequency Power Transformers

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    Nowadays medium voltage conversion systems, like traction and energy distribution systems, aim to increase power density. Volume, weight and material reduction are gaining the market today. Due to the development of new high power semiconductor devices a new working frequency range is conceived, where magnetic component reduction is feasible. The core element of these new conversion systems is the medium frequency transformer. For an optimized design of the conversion system, the correct determination of transformer core losses is essential. Sinusoidal approaches, accurate enough for line frequency transformers, do not cope with the non-sinusoidal waveforms of future medium voltage conversion systems. In the past few years several empirical methods derived from the original Steinmetz equation have been introduced to determine magnetic core losses for non-sinusoidal waveforms. This paper proposes extended expressions for core loss determination in case of rectangular three level voltage waveforms, typical of high power converters. These expressions are compared in simulation and with experimental results obtained in the same conditions using a reduced scale dc-ac conversion system prototype that includes a 61.6 kVA/2 kHz transformer. It is shown that some of these techniques allow a considerable loss estimation accuracy (error below 12% for any ratio)
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