Smart Power Electronics–Based Solutions to Interface Solar-Photovoltaics (PV), Smart Grid, and Electrified Transportation: State-of-the-Art and Future Prospects
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Excessive current harmonic distortion on the grid—when interfacing an EV battery to the grid, the battery is seen as a high-power DC load that continuously draw power from the grid, producing a high harmonic distortion;
- Sophisticated tracking algorithms has to be used to optimize the extraction of the maximum power point (MPP) of the PV array at any extreme environment conditions;
- It is important to follow the behavior of the PV module at higher frequencies, trying to avoid high voltage ripples at the output side of the DC–DC converter used at the PV stage. If there are high ripples, it will produce an instability in the MPP;
- Depending on the requirements of the system, the type of galvanic isolation at the input or output of the system must be decided, considering decisive factors such as weight, cost, additional losses produced in the system, and the power factor;
- Adequate DC output so it meets the power quality requirements of the AC grid;
- When using non-isolated inverters, there are associated problems such as DC current injection to the grid and common mode leakage current.
2. Overview of EV and PV Systems
2.1. Electric Vehicles
2.2. PV Systems
3. PV-Grid Tied Charging Stations for EVs and PHEVs
3.1. Structure of the System
3.2. Operating Modes
3.2.1. Mode 1 (PV to Battery)
3.2.2. Mode 2 (Grid to Battery)
3.2.3. Mode 3 (PV and Grid to Battery)
3.2.4. Mode 4 (PV to Grid)
3.2.5. Mode 5 (Vehicle-to-Grid)
4. Power Converter Topologies
4.1. PV Stage (Unidirectional DC–DC Converters)
4.2. AC Grid Stage (AC–DC Converters)
- One-phase half-bridge (HB) bidirectional boost inverter (Figure 7a);
- One-phase voltage source inverter (VSI) full-bridge (FB) bidirectional boost inverter (Figure 7b);
- One-phase one-stage isolated bidirectional inverter with output low pass filter (LPF) (Figure 7c);
- Full-bridge (FB) bidirectional inverter with leakage current reduction (Figure 7d);
- Three-phase full-bridge (FB) bidirectional inverter (Figure 7e);
- Three-level three-phase diode neutral point clamped (NPC) inverter (Figure 7f);
- Three-phase bridgeless boost inverter (Figure 7g);
- Three-phase Vienna rectifier (Figure 7h).
4.3. Charger Stage (Bidirectional DC–DC Converters)
4.3.1. Non-Isolated Charger Topologies
- Bidirectional converter with coupled inductors and output filter (Figure 8a);
- Zero-voltage-switching (ZVS) interleaved HB converter (Figure 8b);
- HB converter with resonant circuit (Figure 8c);
- Zero-voltage-transition (ZVT) interleaved converter with resonant circuit (Figure 8d);
- ZVS HB converter with coupled inductors (Figure 8e);
- Three-phase interleaved buck converter (Figure 8f).
4.3.2. Isolated Charger Topologies
4.3.3. Single-Stage Conversion (Z-Source Inverter)
- Single point of fault is avoided;
- ZSI has a packed structure due to the decreased number of stages;
- Galvanic isolation is feasible between the charger side and the PV and grid;
- Presents an opening to step up the charging power levels by adding such converters;
- Any battery voltage levels can be charged by changing the charger side of the converter between voltage sharing or current sharing;
- Due to the dependency on the size of passive components, higher frequency this inverter can be designed using wide-band-gap devices.
5. Conclusions and Future Prospects
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type | Level | Supplied Voltage Range (V) | Maximum Current (A) | Output Power Level (kW) | Estimated Charge Time (hours) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AC charging (on-board chargers) | Level 1 | 120 Vac (1-phase) | up to 16 A | up to 1.92 kW | 7–17 h |
Level 2 | 208–240 Vac (1-phase) | up to 80 A | up to 19.2 kW | 0.4–7 h | |
Level 3 | 208–240 Vac (1 and 3-phase) | up to 400 A | up to 96 kW | Less than 0.5 h | |
DC charging (off-board chargers) | Level 1 | 200–450 VDC | up to 80 A | up to 36 kW | 0.4–1.2 h |
Level 2 | 200–450 VDC | up to 200 A | up to 90 kW | 0.2–0.4 h | |
Level 3 | 200–600 VDC | up to 400 A | up to 240 kW | 0.1–0.2 h |
Ref. | DC-DC Topology | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|
[29,42,58] | Boost Converter |
|
|
|
[29,42] | Buck-Boost Converter |
|
|
|
[29,42] | Cuk Converter |
|
|
|
[29,42] | SEPIC Converter |
|
|
|
Ref. | Inverter Topologies | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|
[13,18,28,38,44,45,46,61,65] | One-Phase HB Bidirectional Boost Inverter |
|
|
|
[13,17,18,38,44,45,46,61] | One-Phase VSI FB Bidirectional Boost Inverter |
|
|
|
[13,63] | One-Stage Isolated Bidirectional Inverter with Output LPF |
|
|
|
[13,38,62] | FB Bidirectional Inverter with Leakage Current Reduction |
|
|
|
[13,38,57,66,67] | Three-Phase FB Bidirectional Inverter |
|
|
|
[34,43,47] | Three-Level Three-Phase Diode NPC Inverter |
|
|
|
[17,34,57] | Three-Phase Bridgeless Boost Inverter |
|
|
|
[17,25,34,64,68,69] | Three-Phase Vienna Rectifier |
|
|
|
Ref. | Charger Topologies | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|
[13,38,48,70,71] | Bidirectional Converter with Coupled Inductors and Output Filter |
|
|
|
[17,38,49] | ZVS Interleaved HB Converter |
|
|
|
[13,38,72] | HB Converter with Resonant Circuit |
|
|
|
[13,38,73] | ZVT Interleaved Converter with Resonant Circuit |
|
|
|
[13,38,74] | ZVS HB Converter with Coupled Inductors |
|
|
|
[34,75,76] | Three-Phase Interleaved Buck Converter |
|
|
|
Ref. | Charger Topologies | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|
[13,38,77] | ZVS DAB Converter |
|
|
|
[17,34,80,81] | Phase-Shift FB Converter |
|
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[22,34,78,82,83,84] | FB LLC Resonant Converter |
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[22,79] | ZVS FB Converter with Capacitive Output Filter |
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[50] | Four Interleaved Flyback Converter |
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© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Aragon-Aviles, S.; Trivedi, A.; Williamson, S.S. Smart Power Electronics–Based Solutions to Interface Solar-Photovoltaics (PV), Smart Grid, and Electrified Transportation: State-of-the-Art and Future Prospects. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 4988. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10144988
Aragon-Aviles S, Trivedi A, Williamson SS. Smart Power Electronics–Based Solutions to Interface Solar-Photovoltaics (PV), Smart Grid, and Electrified Transportation: State-of-the-Art and Future Prospects. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(14):4988. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10144988
Chicago/Turabian StyleAragon-Aviles, Sandra, Ashutosh Trivedi, and Sheldon S. Williamson. 2020. "Smart Power Electronics–Based Solutions to Interface Solar-Photovoltaics (PV), Smart Grid, and Electrified Transportation: State-of-the-Art and Future Prospects" Applied Sciences 10, no. 14: 4988. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10144988
APA StyleAragon-Aviles, S., Trivedi, A., & Williamson, S. S. (2020). Smart Power Electronics–Based Solutions to Interface Solar-Photovoltaics (PV), Smart Grid, and Electrified Transportation: State-of-the-Art and Future Prospects. Applied Sciences, 10(14), 4988. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10144988