Title :
Performance of Power-Limited Differential Power Processing Architectures in Mismatched PV Systems
Author :
Olalla, Carlos ; Deline, Chris ; Clement, Daniel ; Levron, Yoash ; Rodriguez, M. ; Maksimovic, Dragan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr., Electron., & Autom. Control Eng., Rovira i Virgili Univ., Tarragona, Spain
Abstract :
Differential power processing (DPP) architectures employ distributed, low power processing, submodule-integrated converters to mitigate mismatches in photovoltaic (PV) power systems, while introducing no insertion losses. This paper evaluates the effects of the simple voltage-balancing DPP control approach on the submodule-level maximum power point (MPP) efficiency. It is shown that the submodule MPP efficiency of voltage-balancing DPP converters exceeds 98% in the presence of worst-case MPP voltage variations due to irradiance or temperature mismatches. Furthermore, the effects of reduced converter power rating in the isolated-port DPP architecture are investigated by long-term, high-granularity simulations of five representative PV system scenarios. For partially shaded systems, it is shown that the isolated-port DPP architecture offers about two times larger energy yield improvements compared to full power processing (FPP) module-level converters, and that it outperforms module-level FPP approaches even when the power rating of DPP converters is only 20-30% of the PV system peak power. In the cases of aging-related mismatches, more than 90% of the energy yield improvements are obtained with DPP converters rated at only 10% of the PV peak power.
Keywords :
losses; photovoltaic power systems; power convertors; DPP architectures; FPP module-level converters; MPP efficiency; PV systems; converter power rating; full power processing; insertion losses; low power processing; maximum power point efficiency; partially shaded systems; photovoltaic power systems; power-limited differential power processing architectures; submodule-integrated converters; voltage-balancing DPP control; Computer architecture; Inverters; Microwave integrated circuits; Power conversion; Temperature; Temperature measurement; Voltage control; Aging; dc??dc converters; differential power processing (DPP); equalization; mismatch; partial shading; photovoltaic modules; submodule-integrated converters (subMICs);
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2014.2312980