DocumentCode :
3296702
Title :
DC power system stability
Author :
Hodge, C.G. ; Flower, J.O. ; Macalindin, A.
Author_Institution :
BMT Defence Services Ltd., Bath
fYear :
2009
fDate :
20-22 April 2009
Firstpage :
433
Lastpage :
439
Abstract :
The advantages of utilising direct current electricity for the transmission of power has many acknowledged advantages and it is now receiving serious consideration for adoption in the marine and naval sectors, indeed manufacturers of marine electrical propulsion systems are confident of offering DC power systems to the commercial market in the near future and design studies for future naval platforms in many of the world´s navies are favouring DC. But in addition to the manifold advantages such as power transmission density, efficiency and flexibility there is one inherent weakness - stability when supplying constant power loads - which whilst not an incurable problem first needs to be understood in order that a robust design can be achieved in all operating conditions. The problem is highly non-linear and has resulted in several papers applying complex and highly arcane methodologies. However in the authors´ view the problem is tractable to the ubiquitous control analysis of linearisation about a set point - even though the problem itself being a physical manifestation of hardware characteristics is not strictly within the control engineer´s domain. This paper explains the source of the instability illustrates the analysis methodology, assesses a method of compensation and compares the linearised approach to a non-linear approach.
Keywords :
DC power transmission; electric propulsion; marine vehicles; power system stability; DC power system stability; marine electrical propulsion systems; power transmission density; power transmission efficiency; power transmission flexibility; ubiquitous control analysis; Control systems; Industrial power systems; Manufacturing; Power engineering and energy; Power system analysis computing; Power system stability; Power transmission; Pumps; Robust stability; Voltage;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Electric Ship Technologies Symposium, 2009. ESTS 2009. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3438-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3439-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ESTS.2009.4906548
Filename :
4906548
Link To Document :
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