Title :
Differential flatness control approach for fuel cell/solar cell power plant with Li-ion battery storage device for grid-independent applications
Author :
Thounthong, P. ; Sikkabut, S. ; Mungporn, P. ; Tricoli, P. ; Nahid-Mobarakeh, B. ; Pierfederici, S. ; Davat, B. ; Piegari, L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Teacher Training in Electr. Eng., King Mongkut´s Univ. of Technol. North Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand
Abstract :
A solar cell/hydrogen energy power plant, fed by photovoltaic (PV) and fuel cell (FC) sources with a Li-ion battery (Bat) storage device and suitable for distributed generation applications, is proposed herein. The PV is used as the main source; the FC acts as a backup, feeding only the insufficiency power (steady-state) from the PV; and the battery functions as an auxiliary source and a short-term storage system for supplying the deficiency power (transient and steady-state) from the PV and the FC. For high-power applications and optimization in power converters, four-phase parallel converters are implemented for the FC converter, the PV converter, and the battery converter, respectively. Using the non-linear estimation based on the differential flatness property for dc bus energy regulation, we propose a simple solution to the fast response and stabilization problems in the power system. This is the main contribution of this research paper. The prototype small-scale power plant implemented was composed of a PEMFC system (1.2 kW, 46 A [NexaTM Ballard Power Systems]), a PV array (0.8 kW [Ekarat Solar Cell]), and a Li-ion module (11.6 Ah, 24 V [SAFT Technology]). Experimental results validate the excellent control algorithm during load cycles.
Keywords :
energy storage; fuel cell power plants; photovoltaic power systems; power convertors; power grids; proton exchange membrane fuel cells; secondary cells; DC bus energy regulation; FC converter; Li-ion battery storage device; PEMFC system; PV converter; battery converter; current 46 A; differential flatness control approach; four-phase parallel converters; fuel cell power plant; fuel cell sources; grid-independent applications; hydrogen energy power plant; nonlinear estimation; photovoltaic sources; power 0.8 kW; power 1.2 kW; power converters; short-term storage system; small-scale power plant; solar cell power plant; Batteries; Educational institutions; Fuel cells; Power generation; Power system stability; System-on-chip; Voltage control; Flatness control; Li-ion battery; fuel cells; nonlinear system; photovoltaic;
Conference_Titel :
Power Electronics, Electrical Drives, Automation and Motion (SPEEDAM), 2014 International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Ischia
DOI :
10.1109/SPEEDAM.2014.6872100