Title :
A DC-link capacitor minimization method through direct capacitor current control
Author :
Gu, Bon-Gwan ; Nam, Kwanghee
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Pohang Univ. of Sci. & Technol., South Korea
Abstract :
If the converter side dc-link current is made equal to the inverter side dc-link current in a pulsewidth modulation (PWM) converter-inverter system, no current will flow through the dc-link capacitor. As a result, no dc-link voltage variation occurs. This leads to the possibility of making a large reduction in the size of dc-link capacitors, which are expensive, bulky, and have a lifetime limit. However, a converter current control loop inherently involves a delay in supplying the required current. In this paper, a capacitor current is ified with a feedforward compensation term. To minimize the response delay, the authors calculate the compensation amount in terms of voltage and inject it at the voltage node. In calculating the compensation term, a differentiator is incorporated with a one-step predictor developed from converter and inverter dynamics. Simulation and experiments are performed with only 40 μF of dc-link capacitance for a 9-kW motor, and the results support the validity of the proposed scheme.
Keywords :
PWM invertors; PWM power convertors; electric current control; feedforward; power capacitors; 9 kW; DC-link capacitor minimization method; PWM converter-inverter system; direct capacitor current control; feedforward compensation term; inverter side DC-link current; one-step predictor; pulse width modulation; response delay minimization; Capacitance; Capacitors; Current control; Current supplies; Delay; Minimization methods; Pulse inverters; Pulse width modulation converters; Pulse width modulation inverters; Voltage; DC-link capacitor; PWM inverter; induction motor; pulsewidth-modulation (PWM) converter;
Journal_Title :
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIA.2006.870036