DocumentCode
42322
Title
The Alternate Arm Converter: A New Hybrid Multilevel Converter With DC-Fault Blocking Capability
Author
Merlin, Michael M. C. ; Green, T.C. ; Mitcheson, Paul D. ; Trainer, D.R. ; Critchley, Roger ; Crookes, Will ; Hassan, Foyzul
Author_Institution
Dept. of EEE, Imperial Coll. London, London, UK
Volume
29
Issue
1
fYear
2014
fDate
Feb. 2014
Firstpage
310
Lastpage
317
Abstract
This paper explains the working principles, supported by simulation results, of a new converter topology intended for HVDC applications, called the alternate arm converter (AAC). It is a hybrid between the modular multilevel converter, because of the presence of H-bridge cells, and the two-level converter, in the form of director switches in each arm. This converter is able to generate a multilevel ac voltage and since its stacks of cells consist of H-bridge cells instead of half-bridge cells, they are able to generate higher ac voltage than the dc terminal voltage. This allows the AAC to operate at an optimal point, called the “sweet spot,” where the ac and dc energy flows equal. The director switches in the AAC are responsible for alternating the conduction period of each arm, leading to a significant reduction in the number of cells in the stacks. Furthermore, the AAC can keep control of the current in the phase reactor even in case of a dc-side fault and support the ac grid, through a STATCOM mode. Simulation results and loss calculations are presented in this paper in order to support the claimed features of the AAC.
Keywords
HVDC power convertors; power grids; power system faults; static VAr compensators; AAC; H-bridge cells; HVDC applications; STATCOM mode; ac grid; alternate arm converter; conduction period; dc-fault blocking capability; dc-side fault; director switches; modular multilevel converter; multilevel ac voltage; new converter topology; phase reactor; sweet spot; two-level converter; Automatic voltage control; Insulated gate bipolar transistors; Mathematical model; Power conversion; Topology; AC–DC power converters; HVDC transmission; STATCOM; emerging topologies; fault tolerance; multilevel converters; power system faults;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8977
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPWRD.2013.2282171
Filename
6623197
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