Title :
Ultrafast autonomous solid state circuit breakers for shipboard DC power distribution
Author :
Shen, Z. John ; Roshandeh, Aref M. ; Zhenyu Miao ; Sabui, Gourab
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Inst. of Technol., Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract :
Short circuit protection remains one of the major technical barriers in DC power systems. This paper introduces a new concept of ultrafast autonomous SSCBs. The new SSCB comprises one or more normally-on WBG transistor as the main static switch and a fast-starting isolated DC/DC converter as the protection driver. It detects short circuit faults by sensing its drain-source voltage rise, and draws power from the fault condition itself to turn and hold off the switch. Prototypes experimentally demonstrate repeated interruption of fault currents up to 180 amperes at a DC bus voltage of 400 volts within 0.8 μs. A method to extend this concept to higher bus voltages is also proposed and verified with PSPICE simulation. A hybrid protection strategy, which combines protective power converters, autonomous SSCBs, and networked SSCBs, is proposed for shipboard DC power architectures.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; circuit breakers; marine power systems; power distribution protection; PSPICE simulation; drain-source voltage rise; fast-starting isolated DC/DC converter; fault condition; fault current interruption; hybrid protection strategy; protection driver; protective power converters; shipboard DC power distribution; short circuit faults; short circuit protection; ultrafast autonomous SSCB; ultrafast autonomous solid state circuit breakers; Circuit breakers; Circuit faults; JFETs; Logic gates; Silicon carbide; Switches; Switching circuits; DC power; SiC JFET; WBG semiconductors; solid state circuit breaker (SSCB);
Conference_Titel :
Electric Ship Technologies Symposium (ESTS), 2015 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Alexandria, VA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-1856-0
DOI :
10.1109/ESTS.2015.7157908