1. Introduction
Recently, as the micro grid is developed and the renewable energy source increases, it is difficult to maintain the stable power quality of the distribution grid. In addition, it is hard to keep the voltage and frequency quality constant due to voltage drop caused by the distribution distance. Thus, retaining a high quality of input and output voltage for variety loads is a new issue. The conventional distribution transformer has traditionally been used for distribution voltage conversion because of its simple structure, high reliability, and economic efficiency. However, this transformer has a passive operation characteristic. Thus, it affects the distribution grid if the load is varied. If voltage variation, such as the voltage sag or swell, occurs, these problems affect the output characteristics directly. To solve this problem, a tap transformer was used to adjust the winding by forming a tap on a part of the winding of the tap transformer. If the ratio of the turns of the tap transformer is and the tap winding is , when the voltage sag occurs, the tap transformer turns ratio is converted to to increase the secondary side voltage. Conversely, when the voltage swell occurs, the winding ratio is reduced to to decrease the secondary side voltage. However, the tap transformer can only compensate for the certain voltage, so that the voltage compensation range is not linear. In addition, a mechanical tap changer is needed to physically change the tap winding. So, active and real-time control of variation in the distribution grid voltage is difficult.
Solid state transformers (SST) have been studied to overcome these drawbacks that are shown in
Figure 1 [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6]. SST is a system composed of power converter for micro grid, renewable energy source, and direct current (DC) distribution system. SST is capable of active control of primary side and secondary side voltage, current, power factor, and power flow. Real-time control of output voltage is also possible. Because SST uses high frequency transformer as electric isolation stage, they can have smaller volume and higher power density than the traditional power transformer. Nevertheless, SST has the disadvantage that the converter must be configured towards high voltage power semiconductor switches in order to cope with the high distribution grid voltage. Recently, high voltage rated power semiconductor switches over 15 kV have been studied, but these are difficult to use commercially [
7,
8,
9,
10]. Therefore, in order to apply the commercial power semiconductor switches, cascaded multi-module structure in which power modules are connected in a series or parallel is forced. Accordingly, separate communication interface circuits are required for applying the cascaded multi-module structure and complicated control algorithms are needed to compensate the voltage and power unbalance between the modules [
11,
12,
13]. Also, since the rectifiers stage of SST is connected in series without galvanic isolation, all of the modules must have high electrical insulation of several tens of kV. DC link voltage, distribution grid voltage, and current sensor for controlling the system also require at least 20 kV electrical isolation. In addition, since the SST completely replaces the existing transformer, it is necessary to construct a new infrastructure to employ it to the distribution grid. When a fault condition occurs in the SST, it is difficult to protect the load.
Active hybrid solid state transformer (AHSST), as shown in
Figure 2, has been researched to overcome these drawbacks [
14,
15,
16,
17]. AHSST is called a controllable network transformer, flexible transformer is a system which combines the conventional tap transformer and power converter that can perform the functions of SST. Input of the converter connected to part of the primary side winding of the tap transformer and the output of the converter is connected to the distribution grid in series. Unlike the conventional tap transformer, AHSST does not physically change the winding, but rather outputs the compensation voltage in series to the grid. AHSST has a simple structure and it can utilized directly to existing distribution infrastructure. AHSST can control the primary side and secondary side voltage, power factor, and power flow actively, according to the system structure. Real-time control is also possible, even with sudden variations in the distribution grid voltage such as voltage sag and swell. AHSST uses only a fraction of the distribution grid voltage as input, so it can operate with a lower voltage and power rating and lower electrical isolation than SST. In general, the input voltage of the AHSST is the tap voltage of the transformer, which is determined by the ratio of the tap winding to the primary side winding. Also, in the case of a distribution transformer, since the primary side voltage is very high and the current is very small as compared to the secondary side, so the power that AHSST has to handle is very small. Therefore, it can be applied to a distribution grid of several hundred kilowatt power class. AHSST has a structure in which a power converter is coupled to a conventional power transformer, which increases the weight of the transformer when compared to a conventional power transformer. However, since AHSST is rated only as part of the transformer, the volume is small and it can be attached to the cooling plate of the transformer, so that the volume of the entire system is minimized. In the previous studied AHSST, the converter can only output the average value of the tap voltage through pulse width modulation (PWM) switching, so that voltage synthesis is impossible when the tap voltage is zero. It is possible to output only the voltage in-phase with the tap voltage and the range of the output voltage can not exceed the tap voltage. So, it is impossible to cope with a voltage fluctuation, such as voltage sag or swell exceeding the tap winding ratio. In addition, both two tap voltage must be used to implement the boost and buck operation mode, which forces the use of high voltage rated power semiconductor switch. To solve these drawbacks, a structure in which two tap voltages are separately used has been studied. This structure uses two relays. Accordingly, this system has a disadvantage that a separate sequence is required to designate the relay operation point when the mode is change. Because AHSST is directly connected to the tap transformer, it is difficult to ensure control performance according to the internal impedance of the transformer. So, the dynamic response of the converter controller is important, because the input voltage and output power condition of the converter depend on the grid compensation voltage. In addition, since it is connected in series to the high voltage distribution grid, an analysis of the grid noise and electrical isolation are required. The basic structure AHSST is currently undergoing empirical studies. However, AHSST requires more research because the reliability of AHSST depends on the control algorithm, the circuit structure, and the electric and magnetic field characteristics of the transformer. System circuit stability also is needed. Nevertheless, since it has lower electric isolation and rating than the solid state transformer, it has an advantage in securing reliability when compared to conventional SST. The proposed AHSST can overcome all of these drawbacks. Since it has two stage structure, independent voltage output is possible depending on the polarity of the tap voltage and it has a wider voltage compensation range than the tap voltage. Therefore, even if only one tap voltage is used, the functional implementation is possible, so that no additional circuit, such as a relay, is required.
This paper presents novel two stage AHSST system that is based on three-level NPC converter using SiC MOSFET. The two stage AHSST structure has a wider control range, higher efficiency and power density, power factor, and power flow control range than previously studied AHSST system. The proposed system consists of two stage back-to-back converter composing of rectifier and inverter. Topologies of power stages employed three-level diode neutral point clamping (NPC) topology, so the power semiconductor switches with a voltage rating that is twice as low as a two-level topology can be used. Since, two stage structure has the DC link capacitors, the inverter can control the magnitude and phase angle of the output voltage independent to the tap voltage. Hence, it can operate for using only half of the tap voltage. All power semiconductor switches are applied with SiC MOSFETs and SiC schottky diodes to reduce the switching losses and to implement high efficiency and power density [
7]. The design and implementation of power stage was verified through electrical insulation test and thermal simulation. In
Section 2, the previously studied AHSST is analyzed and proposed AHSST system is designed and analyzed in
Section 3. The performance of the proposed system is verified by prototype simulation and experiments in
Section 4 and
Section 5.
2. Active Hybrid Solid State Transformer
AHSST consists of the tap transformer and power converter basically. The converter can be connected to the primary side or secondary side windings of the tap transformer, respectively. When the AHSST is connected to the secondary side windings, active control of the secondary side voltage and current and power factor control are possible. In this structure, since the converter takes the whole of the secondary side windings as input and output, the converter must cover the total power for the load. On the other hand, when the converter is connected to the parts of the primary side windings, active control of voltage, current, and power factor is also possible. The rating of the converter can be designed to be lower than the rating of the load. One stage AHSST structure that is studied in [
14,
15,
16,
17,
18] consists of AC/AC converter that is shown in
Figure 3. The AC/AC converter controls the magnitude of the output voltage that is average value of the tap voltage to control primary side voltage of the tap transformer. The secondary side voltage is finally controlled according to the controlled primary side voltage.
,
, and
are primary side winding, tap winding, and secondary side winding, respectively.
When
is turned on, the turn ratio of transformer becomes
. So, the secondary side voltage increases. On the contrary, when
is turned on, the turn ratio of the transformer becomes
. As the number of primary side winding increases, the secondary side voltage decreases. To control the secondary side voltage linearly, the output voltage of the converter compensated the distribution grid in series through the complementary PWM operation of
and
. The output voltage of the converter according to the state of the switches is given by the following Equations (1) and (2).
,
,
,
,
, and
are the grid voltage, primary side voltage, tap voltage, duty of the
, output voltage of converter, and switching period, respectively.
The maximum output voltage of the converter is shown in Equation (3). It can not exceed the tap voltage. Accordingly, the control range of secondary side voltage is equal to the tap winding ratio shown in Equation (4). In addition, the AC/AC converter does not have separate energy storage components, such as capacitors, so it cannot synthesize the output voltage when the tap voltage is zero. As a result, the AC/AC converter controls the output voltage magnitude easily within a certain range, but the phase of the output voltage can not control because only the in-phase voltage can be synthesized at all times. For this reason, it is very difficult to control the power factor in the one stage AHSST. Using dual virtual quadrature sources (DVQS) algorithm, which is a method of controlling power flow by injecting second order harmonics into the duty reference of the converter and change the phase of secondary side voltage [
15,
16], power factor and power flow control is possible, but its control range is limited by the load and the line impedance conditions. Since the voltage of the
is used as an input of converter, the voltage applied to the switch, becomes
so that the use of a high-voltage switch is forced. To overcome this disadvantage, a structure shown in
Figure 4 has been studied in which each
are used independently [
18].
This system structure is also composed of an AC/AC converter, but relays are added to select each tap voltage respectively according to boost or buck operation mode. If
R1 is turned on, then it operates in the boost mode and only uses the upper tap voltage. At this mode, the converter outputs an in-phase voltage to the grid. Accordingly, primary side voltage is increased so that the secondary side voltage is also increased. On the contrary, when
R2 is turned on, lower tap voltage is only used. It operates in the buck mode and input voltage of the converter is
. So, converter only outputs the inverse-phase voltage to the grid. As a result, primary side voltage is decreased so that secondary side voltage is also decreased. Because the system using relays only uses half the tap voltage, it can reduce the voltage applied to the power semiconductor switch by half when compared with the system that is shown in the
Figure 3. However, the reliability of the system is not ensured by using relays, and the control sequence for changing the operation mode is required.
The novel two stage AHSST is proposed in this paper. The power converter consists of an AC/DC rectifier and DC/AC inverter. The compensation range of the secondary side voltage can be widened according to the rectifier boost ratio. The inverter can output independent voltage, regardless of the phase of the tap voltage, because of the energy storage components, such as DC link capacitors, so it can control the power factor easily. The range of the power factor and power flow control is also wider than the conventional AHSST system in
Figure 3 and
Figure 4. Two stage AHSST can be operated with a simple control algorithm and no mode change sequence is required. Additionally, it is possible to synthesize the voltage using only one tap voltage.
4. Simulation Results
To examine the performance of the proposed system, the simulation model that is shown in
Figure 6 is implemented using PowerSiM 11.1.
Table 1 gives the prototype system parameters. Tap transformer has 660 V:220 V voltage rating.
The tap voltage was selected to be 66 V, which is 10% of grid voltage. The DC link voltage of the rectifier is designed to 220 V when considering MI. The voltage compensation range of the inverter is , which is 11% of grid voltage. The system power rating is 1 kW (resistor load) and switching frequency is 20 kHz. At this time, the voltage applied to the switch is 110 V, which can be reduced by 41% from the conventional AHSST structure under the same condition. Simulation is tested under the two following cases.
• Case 1. Boost and buck mode operation
Case 1 is a condition for controlling the secondary side voltage when the grid voltage is constant. At this time, the maximum range of the secondary voltage that can be controlled by the inverter is
.
Figure 8 shows waveforms of the input pole voltage (
), input current (
), and duty reference (
) of the rectifier.
consists of three levels of voltage (
) and the phase of the input current is close to the unity. Since the grid voltage is constant, the rectifier outputs the same voltage waveform in both the boost and buck mode operations, regardless of the inverter output. The input current of the rectifier is determined by the magnitude of the output compensation voltage of the inverter.
Figure 9 shows the waveform of the grid voltage (
), inverter output voltage (
), tap voltage (
), and secondary side voltage (
) under buck mode operation. When buck mode is started after 1 s, the inverter outputs the inverse phase voltage as the tap voltage. Since the DC link voltage is controlled to 220 V by the rectifier, the maximum voltage of the inverter output voltage is −76 V by the Equation (7), so that it is greater than the tap voltage of 66 V. Therefore, the voltage control range of the inverter is 15% wider than the existing AHSST. As a result, the magnitude of secondary side voltage becomes 194 V, according to Equation (6).
Figure 10 is waveform under boost mode operation. When boost mode is started after 1 s, the inverter synthesizes the voltage of the same phase as the grid voltage. Output voltage of the inverter is 76 V, so that magnitude of secondary side voltage becomes 245 V, according to Equation (6).
In the case 1 condition, the voltage control range of the secondary side is 25 V, which is 3 V wider than the existing AHSST, which can control the secondary side voltage to 22 V. The compensation voltage range can be further increased by increasing the boost ratio of the rectifier.
• Case 2. Constant control of secondary side voltage under the grid voltage sag and swell occurs
Case 2 is the constant control of secondary side voltage when 10% grid voltage sag or swell occurs. The primary side voltage must be kept constant for constant secondary side voltage, even when grid voltage changes.
Figure 11 shows the waveform in the case 2 condition. If a voltage sag occurs after 0.5 s, a positive inverter output voltage reference is generated to boost the decreased secondary side voltage. Conversely, if a voltage swell occurs after 1 s, inverter outputs a negative voltage reference to decrease the secondary side voltage.
5. Experimental Results
Figure 12 shows the experimental setup for the proposed system prototype. The same parameters that are shown in
Table 1 are applied. 1:6 transformer and variable AC autotransformer (variac) were used to obtain grid voltage of 660 V. The input voltage of the system is regulated by connecting the 1:6 transformer to variac.
The power semiconductor switches and diodes in each power stage used 1200 V SiC MOSFET (C2M0040120) and 1200 V SiC schottky diode (C4D20120D). By using SiC devices, higher switching frequency was applied rather than conventional commercial Si devices, reducing the filter volume and increasing the efficiency and power density. Experiments were also performed on two cases, as in the simulations. All experimental results were carried out under 1kW resistive load conditions.
Figure 13 shows waveforms of input pole voltage, input current and duty reference of rectifier in case 1 condition. Power factor of rectifier input voltage and current is close to the unity. The DC link voltage is maintained at 220 V.
Figure 14 shows waveforms of
,
,
, and
. After 50 ms, when buck mode is started after 50 ms, the primary side and secondary side voltage decreased. The output voltage of the inverter was −76V, so that primary side voltage of the transformer is controlled from 660 V to 584 V. As the result, secondary side voltage is controlled to 194 V (0.88 p.u), according to Equation (6). The control range of the inverter and secondary side voltage range is 15% wider than existing AHSST.
Figure 15 shows the experimental results of boost operation mode. After 50 ms, boost mode is started, so that primary side and secondary side voltage is increased. The output voltage of the inverter is 76 V. The primary side voltage is controlled from 660 V to 736 V and the secondary side voltage is increased to 245 V (1.11 p.u).
Figure 16 shows the results of case 2. After 6 s, grid voltage sag occurs and the inverter outputs the in-phase compensation voltage. After 14 s, grid voltage swell occurs and inverter outputs the reverse-phase compensation voltage. Maximum secondary side voltage regulation is less than 0.4% (1 V).