Title :
The influence of topology selection on the design of EV/HEV propulsion systems
Author :
Welchko, Brian A. ; Nagashima, James M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
fDate :
6/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The adoption of the 42 V Powernet standard has focused substantial research effort into the design of electric machines for hybrid vehicles. This letter investigates the potential performance benefits afforded by adopting a cascaded inverter topology on the overall system and motor performance. As a particular design example, this letter shows that a cascaded inverter driving an open winding motor can increase the high-speed power density of an induction motor by 73%. For an interior permanent magnet motor, the cascaded topology can increase low-speed torque by 9% and high-speed power by up to 300%. In all cases, the power increase is achieved without increasing the phase current over a more traditional system.
Keywords :
electric propulsion; electric vehicles; hybrid electric vehicles; induction motors; invertors; permanent magnet motors; torque; 42 V; EV propulsion systems; HEV propulsion systems; cascaded inverter topology; cascaded topology; electric machines design; electric vehicles; high-speed power; high-speed power density; hybrid powered vehicles; induction motor; interior permanent magnet motor; low-speed torque; open winding motor; performance benefit; topology selection; Alternators; Hybrid electric vehicles; Induction motors; Instruction sets; Permanent magnet motors; Propulsion; Pulse width modulation inverters; Switches; Topology; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics Letters, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/LPEL.2003.821033