DocumentCode :
115983
Title :
Optimal frequency separation of power sources by multivariable LPV/H control: Application to on-board energy management systems of electric vehicles
Author :
Nwesaty, Waleed ; Bratcu, Antoneta Iuliana ; Sename, Olivier
Author_Institution :
Control Syst. Dept., Grenoble Inst. of Technol., St. Martin d´Hères, France
fYear :
2014
fDate :
15-17 Dec. 2014
Firstpage :
5636
Lastpage :
5641
Abstract :
In this paper a multi-variable LPV/H control approach is applied to design a strategy for power source coordination within a multi-source energy system. Three different kinds of power sources - fuel cell, battery and ultracapacitor - compose the power supply system of an electric vehicle. All sources are current-controlled and paralleled together with their associated DC-DC converters on a common DC-link coupled to vehicle´s electrical motor and its converter. DC-link voltage must be regulated in spite of load power variations representing the driving cycle image. To this end, a MIMO LPV/H provides the three current references so that each source operates in its most suitable frequency range as either high-energy-density or high-power-density source: low-frequency, the mean power is provided by the fuel cell, the ultracapacitor supplies/absorbs the instantaneous variations of power demand and the battery operates in between the two other sources. Selection of H weighting functions is guided by a genetic algorithm whose optimization criterion expresses the frequency-separation requirements. The nonlinear multi-source system is simulated in MATLABP® /Simulink® using the driving cycle of IFSTTAR (Institut Français des Sciences et Technologies des Transports, de l´Aménagement et des Réseaux) as load profile, whose frequency content is richer than the one of Normalized European Driving Cycle (NEDC). Simulation results show good performance in supplying the load at constant DC-link voltage according to user-configured frequency-separation power sharing strategy.
Keywords :
H control; MIMO systems; electric vehicles; energy management systems; genetic algorithms; linear parameter varying systems; multivariable control systems; DC-link voltage; MIMO LPV-H; associated DC-DC converters; battery; constant DC-link voltage; electric vehicles; frequency-separation requirements; fuel cell; genetic algorithm; multisource energy system; multivariable LPV-H control; on-board energy management system; optimal frequency separation; optimization criterion; power supply system; ultracapacitor; Batteries; Frequency control; Fuel cells; Genetic algorithms; Load modeling; Supercapacitors; Voltage control; H control; LPV systems; electric vehicle; frequency separation; power source coordination;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control (CDC), 2014 IEEE 53rd Annual Conference on
Conference_Location :
Los Angeles, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-7746-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.2014.7040271
Filename :
7040271
Link To Document :
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