Power Converters and Power Quality II
CERN Accelerator School on Power Converters Baden, Friday 9th May 2014
- Dr. Daniel Siemaszko
Power Converters and Power Quality II CERN Accelerator School on - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Power Converters and Power Quality II CERN Accelerator School on Power Converters Baden, Friday 9 th May 2014 Dr. Daniel Siemaszko Power Converters and Power Quality II Outline Active power converters for grid connection Power
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compensators when a lot of diode rectifier based converters are installed.
full control of the power factor and injected harmonics together with reactive power compensation.
voltage that may be used by several loads and converters.
adopted by most of the industry.
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LOAD NETWORK DC-link Line inductance Neutral Point LOAD NETWORK Neutral Point DC-link Line inductance VI VI
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(or injected to) the grid.
way to get the current space vector in phase with the voltage space vector.
phase of the current space vector. No Static VAR Compensator needed.
converter allow it. No other active harmonic compensation needed.
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VVSI VNET Lσ Vσ Iσ VNET VVSI Vσ Iσ
studies are on-going on power quality and robustness against network disturbances (F. Boattini).
LINAC 4, studies are on-going of the front–end side for the MW max range (G. Le Godec).
the increase of power (CLIC, HL-LHC, Future Circular Collider), the network might become weaker for given applications, massive use of SVCs and passive front ends might be replaced for active front-end solutions.
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infinite ideal voltage source, its strength must be considered.
generated by switching devices and network disturbances.
phases, among others such as phase dips and phase steps.
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plane (or αβ plane)
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
frame as three vectors which can be transformed in the dq0 synchronous reference rotating frame.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
to phase.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
plane becomes an ellipse.
rotating synchronous frame which affects synchronisation.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
V+1 in the positive sequence rotating reference frame and V-1 in the negative sequence rotating reference frame.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
written as a composition of the positive, negative and zero sequence vectors.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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power converter, that is also where the network voltage is measured.
that is affected by its short-circuit power capability (SSCC).
ωN α β D-axis Q-axis EPCC IPC jXσIPC VPC ENET 3-phase AC/DC VDC EPCC VPC VNET IDC IPC Rσ Lσ RNET LNET Line impedance Filter impedance 3-phase Network PCC
the measured network voltage.
Page 15 Balanced network Unbalance Strong network (20x) Weak network (8x)
synchronous reference frame, other methods exist but will not be covered.
is done through positive and negative sequence decoupling.
unbalanced networks.
fed-forward to the classic single frame vector control as first compulsory step for handling network asymmetries.
which provide the same results in the stationary reference frame.
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the Q component of the network voltage to zero by adjusting the phase of the synchronous reference frame.
function of the phase error (EQ ≈ sin(θGRID-θN)).
proving the phase θN of the reference plane.
[Tdq+1] 1 s ωN EQ Eαβ θN [PI] ED EQ = sin(θGRID - θN) ≅ θERR PI controller 1 s θN ωN 1 Tµs+1 KPs+1 TIs Integrator Filter
dominant time constant.
margin of 63° (magnitude optimum).
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accurate synchronisation to the network voltage and the rejection of high order harmonics from the network and the converter itself.
Magnitude optimum considering the time constant
the system, one can see that the PLL is back to synchronisation after two periods.
connecting reactive loads.
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unbalance, a strong second harmonic component appears in the Q component, the angular frequency, thus the phase
the synchronous rotating frame.
decreasing the filtering time constant, but this would kill dynamics.
combination of a component in the positive sequence, and one in the negative sequence.
voltage vector in the positive sequence and vice-versa.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
frame to one of the two rotating reference frames, will always include the components from the complementary rotating frame.
coming from the complementary rotating frame after filtering.
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Figures are taken from : R. Teodorescu, M. Liserre, and P. Rodriguez : Grid Converters for Photovoltaic and Wind Power Systems, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
[Tdq-2] [Tdq+2] [Tdq-1] [Tdq+1]
fcut=fNET/√2 fcut=fNET/√2
θN E+
DQ
E-
DQ
EDQ [Tdq+2] Eαβ θN
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The decoupling process illustrated - Principle
[Tdq-2] [Tdq+2] [Tdq-1] [Tdq+1]
fcut=fNET/√2 fcut=fNET/√2
θN E+
DQ
E-
DQ
EDQ [Tdq+2] Eαβ θN
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The decoupling process illustrated - Dynamics
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two reference frames, one can be sure that the Q component in the positive reference frame is free of the second harmonic when unbalance occur.
called Double Decoupled Synchronous Reference Frame PLL (DDSRF).
[Tdq-2] [Tdq+2] [Tdq-1] [Tdq+1]
fcut=fNET/√2 fcut=fNET/√2
1 s ωN θN E+
DQ
E-
DQ
EDQ [Tdq+2] E+
Q
Eαβ θN [PI] PLL positive and negative sequence decoupling
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harmonic appearing when the network voltages are unbalanced.
harmonics, but a filter can also be used without affecting the dynamics of the PLL controller.
the voltage phase vector in the positive sequence and the phase vector.
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voltage feed forward, harmonic rejection, etc…) it produces a phase shift in the ellipsoidal representation of an unbalanced network.
separately filtered, their recombination allows to keep the phase of the ellipse in the αβ plane and the oscillation in the DQ plane.
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from the converter or the network itself are much stronger, here the ratio between network and filter impedance is only 5 (against 50 used previously).
their full rejection.
ensured with strong dynamics.
measured voltage in the two rotating reference frames allows the full rejection of all harmonics and an accurate description of the second harmonic coming from the network unbalance.
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directly related to the switching frequency, one may be limited for damping the second harmonic component due to voltage unbalance.
synchronous rotating references frames, the direct and the indirect.
controller, one per synchronous frame working as a mirror.
with voltage asymmetries or force current asymmetry for compensation.
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synchronous rotating reference frame (or DQ frame). The current target is reached by applying the correct voltage vector on the converter side, using the voltage drop across the filter impedance for generating a current.
3-phase AC/DC VDC EPCC VPC VNET IDC IPC Rσ Lσ RNET LNET Line impedance Filter impedance 3-phase Network PCC ωN α β D-axis Q-axis VDNET VQNET EPCC IQREF IREF jXσIREF IDREF VPC VDPC VQPC
controller itself GR(s).
triangle generator, synchronised with the PLL.
used of measurement filters which affect the bandwidth.
constant.
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θN IREAL IMEAS ti ti+1 ti+2 θPMW IREF Measurement GS(s) GM(s) GR(s) EPCC VPC IMEAS IREF VDCTRL IPC Sampling Digital control Power system
dominant time constant.
margin of 63° (magnitude optimum).
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TS=TN TM TI KM KS GR GS GM G0 log(ω) Gain
network voltage controller when the converter is used as a generator.
should be implemented as integral parts as well as in the multivariable controller.
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ωNTLR T1s TLRs+1 T1s IDREF IQREF TLRs+1 T1s IQ ID ωNTLR T1s VQPC ED VDPC EQ VQPC ED VDPC
ωLσ ωLσ
IQ EQ [PI] [PI] ID IDREF IQREF Voltage controller VDC or EDQ control
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switching frequency.
the voltage, the positive sequence remains here unchanged.
allowed by correct decoupling and accuracy in the control parameters tuning through magnitude
decoupling with the very limited impact of the variation of one component on the other.
switching frequency, the dynamics of the controller are fast enough to somehow maintain the symmetry in the current during a voltage phase dip.
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the impact on the network harmonics is more visible and seems stronger.
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ripple only not the control of the current itself.
control dynamics, therefore, the voltage unbalance impacts the current unbalance, which are in the same direction as the voltage as seen here in the negative sequence of the currents.
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control dynamics are fast enough to fully compensate the second harmonic.
switching frequencies tend to be low in respect of switching losses.
voltage sources.
can only be oscillatory, which affects the current control when having a real capacitor.
could be applied in the current for allowing full control of the current negative sequence.
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the current unbalance by controlling not two current component but four, two in each synchronous rotating reference frames.
frames, then decoupled from each other’s DC component.
single DQ frame controller, each of them requiring two current references most likely coming from a voltage controller.
several targets regarding current symmetry or power compensation.
same filtering, in order to achieve optimum parameters with the magnitude
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the single frame multivariable control.
sequence component, for simulating a phase dip in the network.
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separately controlled.
switching frequency and network strength of 50.
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network strength.
controlled without any coupling effect.
frequency is 450Hz.
dimensioned with the following principle: oversizing is very expensive, so under sizing is more likely to happen in industry.
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3-phase AC/DC VDC IC IDC EPCC VPC VNET ILOAD IPC Rσ Lσ RNET LNET DC link Line impedance Filter impedance 3-phase Network PCC CDC 3-phase AC/DC VDC IC IFEED EPCC VPC VNET IDC IPC Rσ Lσ RNET LNET DC link Line impedance Filter impedance 3-phase Network PCC CDC
voltage on the network side.
voltage on the DC side.
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impact on the instantaneous power.
unbalance, the DC-link voltage will also contain the second harmonic.
Figure taken from : A. Yazdani, R. Iravani, "A unified dynamic model and control for the voltage-sourced converter under unbalanced grid conditions," Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on , vol.21, no.3, pp.1620-1629, July 2006.
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phase voltages, adequate control of currents may compensate the 2nd harmonic component in the instantaneous active power, not the reactive.
ratings.
Figure taken from : Siemaszko, D.; Rufer, A.; , ” Power Compensation Approach and Double Frame Control for Grid Connected Converters”, EPE 2013 : 15th European Conference on Power Electronics and Applications, Lille, France, 3-5 September 2013.
daniel.siemaszko@a3.epfl.ch