DocumentCode
776188
Title
Three-Phase Low-Frequency Commutation Inverter for Renewable Energy Systems
Author
Martins, Geomar Machado ; Pomilio, José Antenor ; Buso, Simone ; Spiazzi, Giorgio
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., State Univ. of Campinas
Volume
53
Issue
5
fYear
2006
Firstpage
1522
Lastpage
1528
Abstract
The connection of distributed power sources with the utility grid generally needs an electronic power converter for processing the locally generated power and injecting current into the system. If the source provides a dc voltage, the converter must be able to produce a low-distortion high-power-factor ac current. The same aspects related with the voltage and current distortion produced by nonlinear loads can be considered for the injection of power into the grid. In the absence of a specific standard, this paper takes as a reference the limits for current harmonics given by international standards. The justification for this approach is that, from the resulting line voltage degradation, there is no difference between injected and absorbed currents. This paper presents a three-phase inverter using low-frequency commutation. An auxiliary circuit is added to the inverter topology to reduce the output voltage distortion, thus improving the current waveform. The main advantages of this approach are the minimization of the switching losses and the elimination of the electromagnetic interference, which avoids high-frequency filters necessary in high-frequency commutation inverters
Keywords
DC-AC power convertors; commutation; electromagnetic interference; invertors; power conversion harmonics; power grids; renewable energy sources; switching convertors; DC-AC power conversion; current harmonics; distributed power source; electromagnetic interference elimination; renewable energy system; switching loss minimization; three-phase low-frequency commutation inverter; utility grid; voltage distortion; Analog-digital conversion; Circuits; Degradation; Distributed power generation; Inverters; Mesh generation; Power generation; Power harmonic filters; Renewable energy resources; Voltage; DC–AC power conversion; energy conversion; fuel cells; standby generators;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0046
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIE.2006.882023
Filename
1705643
Link To Document