Title :
THD improvement of a bidirectional flyback inverter by using sliding-mode control
Author :
Octavian Cornea;Gheorghe-Daniel Andreescu;Catalin-Cornel Patrascu;Nicolae Muntean
Author_Institution :
Electrical Engineering Department, Politehnica University of Timisoara, Romania
Abstract :
This paper is focused on a control method to improve the THD factor of a bidirectional flyback inverter. The inverter structure, presented in a previous paper of the authors, contains a DC-DC converter tracking a rectified sinusoidal voltage waveform, and a full-bridge to obtain the AC waveform. The flyback inverter has a zero in the right half plane for the output voltage transfer function in continuous conduction mode (i.e., non-minimum phase system) that produces instability. A novel control method is proposed using a phase lead type compensator for the output voltage error to stabilize the inverter, followed by a sliding mode-PI controller to ensure good dynamic tracking performance and robustness. An average model for stability analysis is developed and used to test the flyback inverter operation with the proposed controller. A detailed system switching model is implemented in PSIM to confirm the results obtained by using the average model. The THD factor is reduced more than three times to a value below 1%, compared with the previous work of the authors. Simulation results involving the flyback inverter switching model prove that the proposed control method provides a good dynamic tracking performance with robust response to step variations in the output current and in the input power supply voltage.
Keywords :
"Inverters","Voltage control","Capacitors","Stability analysis","Mathematical model","Flyback transformers","Robustness"
Conference_Titel :
Electrical Machines & Power Electronics (ACEMP), 2015 Intl Conference on Optimization of Electrical & Electronic Equipment (OPTIM) & 2015 Intl Symposium on Advanced Electromechanical Motion Systems (ELECTROMOTION), 2015 Intl Aegean Conference on
DOI :
10.1109/OPTIM.2015.7426746