Title :
Digital Current Controller for a 1 MHz, 10 kW Three-Phase VIENNA Rectifier
Author :
Hartmann, Michael ; Round, Simon D. ; Ertl, Hans ; Kolar, Johann W.
Author_Institution :
Power Electron. Syst. Lab., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract :
Active three-phase rectifiers operated at switching frequencies of 500 kHz and above, in order to increase their power density, require high-speed current controllers. If these current controllers are implemented purely digitally, which is well established today for 20-200 kHz converter systems, then very high numerical data processing demands result. In this paper, two different types of field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) are evaluated for realizing high-speed converter current control. For the implementation of such controllers, not only the FPGA has to be considered but rather the entire signal chain. Two alternative A/D interfaces (including high-speed low-voltage differential signaling data transmission) that are able to handle data sampling rates up to 25 MSa/s are verified. Subsequently, a digital current controller is designed and it is shown how hardware multiplier blocks of modern FPGAs can be used advantageously. Furthermore, the FPGA implementation of high-resolution pulsewidth modulation providing symmetrical pulse patterns for high switching frequencies is described. Measurements taken from a 10 kW VIENNA rectifier laboratory prototype finally demonstrate the high performance of the proposed control concept and show that a low mains current total harmonic distortion of 1.4% can be achieved for such ultrahigh switching frequency converters.
Keywords :
PWM rectifiers; digital control; electric current control; field programmable gate arrays; frequency convertors; harmonic distortion; A/D interfaces; FPGA; VIENNA rectifier; active three-phase rectifiers; data transmission; digital current controller; field programmable gate arrays; frequency 1 MHz; frequency 20 kHz to 200 kHz; frequency converters; hardware multiplier blocks; harmonic distortion; power 10 kW; power density; pulsewidth modulation; AC–DC power conversion; current control; digital control; field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs); power factor correction (PFC);
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2009.2031437