Title :
A New Sensorless Hybrid MPPT Algorithm Based on Fractional Short-Circuit Current Measurement and P&O MPPT
Author :
Sher, Hadeed Ahmed ; Murtaza, Ali Faisal ; Noman, Abdullah ; Addoweesh, Khaled E. ; Al-Haddad, Kamal ; Chiaberge, Marcello
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., King Saud Univ., Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
This paper presents a new maximum power point tracking (MPPT) method for photovoltaic (PV) systems. The proposed method improves the working of the conventional perturb and observe (P&O) method in changing environmental conditions by using the fractional short-circuit current (FSCC) method. It takes the initial operating point of a PV system by using the short-circuit current method and later shifts to the conventional P&O technique. The advantage of having this two-stage algorithm is rapid tracking under changing environmental conditions. In addition, this scheme offers low-power oscillations around MPP and, therefore, more power harvesting compared with the common P&O method. The proposed MPPT decides intelligently about the moment of measuring short-circuit current and is, therefore, an irradiance sensorless scheme. The proposed method is validated with computer software simulation followed by a dSPACE DS1104-based experimental setup. A buck-boost dc-dc converter is used for simulation and experimental confirmation. Furthermore, the reliability of the proposed method is also calculated. The results show that the proposed MPPT technique works satisfactorily under given environmental scenarios.
Keywords :
electric current measurement; maximum power point trackers; photovoltaic power systems; power system reliability; short-circuit currents; FSCC method; P&O MPPT; buck-boost DC-DC converter; computer software simulation; dSPACE DS1104; fractional short-circuit current measurement method; irradiance sensorless scheme; maximum power point tracking method; perturb and observe method; photovoltaic systems; sensorless hybrid MPPT algorithm; Algorithm design and analysis; Current measurement; Maximum power point trackers; Photovoltaic systems; Power capacitors; Power system simulation; Short-circuit currents; Efficiency; hybrid MPPT; maximum power point tracking (MPPT); modeling and simulation; photovoltaic (PV);
Journal_Title :
Sustainable Energy, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSTE.2015.2438781