126 research outputs found

    Unified Direct-Flux Vector Control for AC Motor Drives

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    The paper introduces a Unified Direct-Flux Vector Control scheme suitable for sinusoidal AC motor drives. The AC drives considered here are Induction Motor, Synchronous Reluctance and synchronous Permanent Magnet motor drives, including Interior and Surface-mounted Permanent Magnet types. The proposed controller operates in stator flux coordinates: the stator flux amplitude is directly controlled by the direct voltage component, while the torque is controlled by regulating the quadrature current component. The unified direct-flux control is particularly convenient when flux-weakening is required, since it easily guarantees maximum torque production under current and voltage limitations. The hardware for control is standard and the control firmware is the same for all the motors under test with the only exception of the magnetic model used for flux estimation at low speed. Experimental results on four different drives are provided, showing the validity of the proposed unified control approac

    Impact of the motor magnetic model on direct flux vector control of interior PM motors

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    The stator-field-oriented, direct-flux vector control has been proven to be effective in terms of linear torque control and model independent performance at limited voltage and current (i.e. in flux weakening) for AC drives of various types. The performance of the direct-flux vector control relies on the accuracy of the flux estimation, as for any field oriented control. The knowledge of the motor magnetic model is critical for flux estimation when the operating at low speed. This paper addresses the effects of a limited knowledge of the motor model on the performance of the control at low speed, for an Interior Permanent Magnet motor drive. Experimental results are give

    Multipolar SPM machines for direct drive application: a comprehensive design approach

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    A closed-form, per-unit formulation is proposed, for the design of surface mounted permanent magnet motors with high number of poles. The model evaluates the shear stress, the power factor and the specific Joule loss as the indicators of the machine performance, and demonstrates that this is determined by the correct choice of a very limited set of key-geometrical parameters. The design criteria are described analytically and then applied to example designs, FEA validated. Distributed- and concentrated-winding configurations are considered. The conclusions of the paper are consistent with the literature and aim to give a roadmap for designers of PM machines in modern applications, such as wind power synchronous generator

    An Integral Battery Charger with Power Factor Correction for Electric Scooter

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    This paper presents an integral battery charger for an electric scooter with high voltage batteries and interior-permanent-magnet motor traction drive. The battery charger is derived from the power hardware of the scooter, with the ac motor drive that operates as three-phase boost rectifier with power factor correction capability. The control of the charger is also integrated into the scooter control firmware that is implemented on a fixed-point DSP controller. Current-controlled or voltage-controlled charge modes are actuated according to the requirements of the battery management system, that is embedded into the battery pack. With respect to previous integrated chargers, the ac current is absorbed at unitary power factor with no harmonic distortion. Moreover, no additional filtering is needed since the pulsewidth modulation ripple is minimized by means of phase interleaving. The feasibility of the integral charger with different ac motors (induction motor, surface-mounted phase modulation motor) is also discussed, by means of a general model purposely developed for three-phase ac machines. The effectiveness of the proposed battery charger is experimentally demonstrated on a prototype electric scooter, equipped with two Li-ion battery packs rated 260 V, 20 A

    Direct Flux Field Oriented Control of IPM Drives with Variable DC-Link in the Field-Weakening Region

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    This paper presents the direct flux control of an interior permanent-magnet (IPM) motor drive in the field-weakening region. The output torque is regulated by the coordinated control of the stator flux amplitude and the current component in quadrature with the flux, and it is implemented in the stator flux reference frame. The control system guarantees maximum torque production taking into account voltage and current limits, in particular in case of large dc-link variations. The field-oriented control does not necessarily require an accurate magnetic model of the IPM motor, and it is able to exploit the full inverter voltage at different dc-link levels with no additional voltage control loop. The feasibility of the proposed control method is investigated in discrete-time simulation, then tested on a laboratory rig, and finally implemented on board of an electric scooter prototype. The motor under test is an IPM permanent-magnet-assisted synchronous reluctance machine, with high-saliency and limited permanent-magnet flu

    Sensorless standstill commissioning of synchronous reluctance machines with automatic tuning

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    This paper deals with the sensorless selfcommissioning of synchronous reluctance motors at standstill. Previous work demonstrated that the injection of high test voltage pulses can be successfully used to determine the flux linkage maps of the Synchronous Reluctance machine without position transducer and with no need of rotor locking. In this work, the tuning aspects of the above self-commissioning technique are analyzed for making it self-tuning. A method for detecting unwanted rotor movement during the test is introduced and used to assess the test’s end and to maximize the id, iq area of inspection. Furthermore, the paper analyzes a number of theoretical and practical implementation issues, first mathematically and then in experiments. The effects of possible error sources are evaluated, including imprecise estimation of the stator resistance and of the inverter voltage distortion, and iron loss. Experimental results are presented for three Synchronous Reluctance motor prototypes

    FEA-based multi-objective optimization of IPM motor design including rotor losses

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    The design optimization of IPM motors for wide speed ranges is considered in this paper by means of a FEAbased multi-objective genetic algorithm (MOGA). The minimum number of simulations is pursued for the fast evaluation of four goal functions: maximum torque, minimum torque ripple, maximum flux weakening capability and minimum rotor harmonic losses. The paper is focused on the rotor design, that is the most controversial aspect of IPM design due to the difficult modeling dominated by magnetic saturation. Three original results are presented: the elimination of higher order torque ripple harmonics and the minimization of FEA evaluations by means of a random rotor position offset and the evaluation, by means of the same static FEA runs, of the eddy current losses in the rotor core
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