Title :
Extended voltage swell ride-through capability for PWM voltage-source rectifiers
Author :
Burgos, Rolando P. ; Wiechmann, Eduardo P.
Abstract :
Voltage swells are one of the most harmful voltage disturbances for static power converters. A supply voltage increase may severely damage or trip converters, causing production and revenue losses. In the case of the PWM voltage source rectifier, a swell causes saturation of its control system, followed by a transition to 6-pulse operation that leaves the DC-link bus uncontrolled. This paper presents a nonlinear control strategy to effectively deal with voltage swells. The proposed scheme takes two actions, first, it exploits the DC-link voltage capacity by allowing dynamic over modulation, and secondly it draws inductive current to maintain control over the DC-link bus in case the former action does not suffice. This is realized using decision-making space vector modulation, which completely covers both sinusoidal (M<0.907) and over-modulation ranges (0.907<M< 1) requiring minimum processing capacity. Further, a nonlinear control strategy is employed to linearize and decouple the converter d-q axes dynamics, assuring a dynamic response totally independent from the operating point. The latter is a desirable feature for high-performance ac drives. Finally, experimental results from a TMS320C32 DSP based system are presented and used for evaluation of the proposed control strategy
Keywords :
PWM power convertors; digital control; digital signal processing chips; dynamic response; electric current control; linearisation techniques; losses; nonlinear control systems; rectifying circuits; voltage control; 6-pulse operation; DC link bus; PWM voltage-source rectifiers; TMS320C32 DSP based system; control system saturation; converter d-q axes dynamics decoupling; converter d-q axes dynamics linearisation; decision-making space vector modulation; dynamic over modulation; inductive current; nonlinear control strategy; production losses; revenue losses; static power converters; supply voltage increase; voltage disturbances; voltage swell ride-through capability; Control systems; Decision making; Digital signal processing; Nonlinear dynamical systems; Power system stability; Production; Pulse width modulation; Rectifiers; Static power converters; Voltage control;
Conference_Titel :
Industrial Electronics Society, 2001. IECON '01. The 27th Annual Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Denver, CO
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7108-9
DOI :
10.1109/IECON.2001.975937