Implementation of Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Triple Port Converter for Renewable Energy Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Proposed Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Converter
2.1. Structure of Zeta-KY Converter
2.2. Modes of Operation of the Zeta-KY Converter
2.2.1. Topology 1: Unidirectional Converter
- (i)
- Mode 1 (S1 is ON and S2, S3 are OFF): In this mode, the switch S1 is turned on and switches S2 and S3 were turned off. Both the sources V1 and V2 were supplying the multiport converter. The inductors L1 and L2 were charged to the value of input voltage V1. The current through L1 increased linearly to a value V1/L1. The capacitor C1 was charged equal to Vo, which was the output voltage of the converter. Diode D1 was reverse biased and diodes D2 and D3 were forward biased.
- (ii)
- Mode 2 (S2 is ON and S1, S3 are OFF): In Mode 2, the switch S2 was turned on and switches S1 and S3 were turned off. V1 was therefore not supplying the circuit. The source V2 supplied the load through D2 and D3. The inductor L1 discharged its magnetic energy and reduced the voltage across it. The positive voltage of V2 turned on switch S2 and the input current flowed through S2, capacitor C2 and to load through L0. Capacitor C2 discharged. In addition, L2 then discharged to a value equal to the output voltage.
- (iii)
- Mode 3 (S3 is ON and S1, S2 are OFF): The switches S1 and S2 were turned off in this mode. Switch S3 was turned on. C2 started charging and the voltage across it was equal to V2. The source V2 supplied the load through C2 and LO.
- (iv)
- Mode 4 (S1, S2, S3 are OFF): This is the mode in which all the switches were open. The current i2 flowed through the inductor L0. The diode D1 freewheels through the inductor L2 when there is no source voltage. The energy stored in the inductors dissipated when all switches are turned off. Thus, in turn diode D1 was forward biases.
2.2.2. Topology 2: Bidirectional Mode
- (i)
- Case 1—presence of high irradiation (PPV > PLOAD): The PV panel fed the load through the Zeta converter. Switch S1 was turned on. In this case, the converter operated as single input single output (SISO) converter. The excess power that was not consumed by the load was utilized for charging the battery through turning on switch S4 from the load bus. The converter acts in bidirectional mode as shown in Figure 7a. Hence, energy conservation is carried out in this case.
- (ii)
- Case 2—presence of moderate irradiation (PPV < PLOAD): When the PV was not able to completely meet the load demand, the battery energy storage system supported it through the KY converter. Now, switches S1, S2, S3 were turned on sequentially. In this case, the converter operated as dual input single output (DISO) converter as shown in Figure 7b.
- (iii)
- Case 3—absence of irradiation (PPV = 0): The battery fed the load through the KY converter. Switches S2 and S3 were turned on as in Figure 7c and the converter operated as single input, single output (SISO) converter.
3. Analysis and Design of the Proposed Zeta-Ky Converter
3.1. Output Voltage of the MPC
3.2. Power Devices Voltage
3.3. Inductor Currents
3.4. Voltage and Current Ripples
3.5. Passive Components Selection
4. Results and Discussions
4.1. Simulation Results
4.2. Experimental Results
4.3. Comparative Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Calculation of Power Loss
Appendix A.1.1. Power Loss in the MOSFET Switches
Appendix A.1.2. Power Loss in the Diodes
Appendix A.1.3. Power Loss in the Inductors
- (i)
- Core loss: the core loss is defined by:
- (ii)
- Copper loss: the inductor copper loss is dependent on the RMS of currents in the inductors and is given by
Appendix A.2. Calculation of Efficiency
Appendix A.3. Converter System Stability
Appendix A.4. Control Algorithm Fed in the Controller
SL. NO | Irradiance (W/sq.m) | VPV (V) | I PV (A) | PPV (W) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1000 | 37.42 | 7.3 | 273.17 |
2 | 800 | 36.86 | 6.6 | 243.28 |
3 | 600 | 36.80 | 5.3 | 195.04 |
4 | 400 | 36.7 | 4.3 | 154.14 |
5 | 200 | 36.7 | 2.3 | 84.41 |
6 | 100 | 36.7 | 1.8 | 66.06 |
7 | 0 | 36.7 | 0 | 0 |
Appendix A.5. Example of Calculated Efficiencies at Different Operating Modes
- (i)
- PV to load
- (ii)
- Battery to load
- (iii)
- PV to battery
SL. NO | Irradiance (W/m2) | PV Panel | Battery | Total Input Power (W) | Load (Ohm) | Converter Output | Calculated Efficiency (%) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vpv(V) | Ipv(A) | P pv(W) | Vb (V) | Ib (A) | Pb (W) | Vo (V) | Io (A) | Po (W) | |||||
1 | 1000 | 37.42 | 7.30 | 273.17 | 40 | 6.20 | 248.00 | 521.17 | 10 | 70.00 | 7.00 | 490.00 | 94.02 |
2 | 1000 | 37.42 | 7.30 | 273.17 | 40 | 1.80 | 72.00 | 345.17 | 15 | 69.90 | 4.66 | 325.73 | 94.37 |
3 | 1000 | 37.42 | 7.30 | 273.17 | 40 | −3.05 | −122.00 | 151.17 | 35 | 69.90 | 2.00 | 139.60 | 92.35 |
4 | 1000 | 37.42 | 7.30 | 273.17 | 40 | −3.50 | −140.00 | 133.17 | 40 | 69.90 | 1.75 | 122.15 | 91.73 |
5 | 0 | 36.70 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 40 | 8.90 | 356.00 | 356.00 | 15 | 69.90 | 4.65 | 324.76 | 91.22 |
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Design Specification | Values | Design Specification | Values |
---|---|---|---|
PV Voltage, Vmp | 36 V | Duty Cycle | 0.67 |
PV Current, Imp | 7.64 A | Inductor Ripple Current | 0.76 A |
PV, Voc | 43.20 V | Minimum Inductor, L1 | 0.63 mH |
PV, Isc | 9.17 A | Minimum Inductor, L2 | 0.72 mH |
PV Power (Max) | 275 W | Ipeak of Filter Inductor | 7.71 A |
Battery Voltage | 40 V | Output Ripple Voltage | 0.07 V |
Battery Capacity | 550.50 Ah | Output Capacitor, Co | 0.11 mF |
Output Voltage | 72 V | Input Ripple Voltage | 0.72 V |
Output Current | 6.94 A | Input C1 Capacitor, C1 | 0.13 mF |
Output Power | 500 W | Ripple Voltage of C1 | 0.36 V |
Output inductor, Lo | 0.52 mH | ||
Switching Frequency | 25 kHz | C2 capacitor | 0.38 mF |
SL. NO | V1 = V2 (V) | D1 (%) | D2 (%) | D3 (%) | VOUT (Est) (V) | VOUT (Act) (V) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 24 | 25 | 25 | 40 | 69 | 68.0 |
2 | 24 | 50 | 10 | 30 | 80 | 79.2 |
3 | 24 | 40 | 10 | 40 | 60 | 59.0 |
4 | 24 | 30 | 26 | 40 | 66 | 65.1 |
5 | 24 | 35 | 15 | 40 | 63 | 62.6 |
SL. NO | D1 = 25% D2 = 25% D3 = 40% | VOUT (Est) (V) | VOUT (Act) (V) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
V1 (V) | V2 (V) | |||
1 | 6 | 6 | 17.25 | 16.2 |
2 | 24 | 12 | 42.0 | 41.3 |
3 | 12 | 24 | 61.5 | 61.0 |
4 | 24 | 24 | 69.0 | 68.5 |
5 | 24 | 20 | 60.0 | 59.1 |
6 | 20 | 24 | 66.5 | 65.6 |
7 | 12 | 12 | 34.5 | 33.8 |
SL. NO | Parameters | Values |
---|---|---|
1 | IRF250-MOSFET Losses (Zeta) | 5.47W |
2 | TST20L200CW Diode Losses | 2.92 W |
3 | PT500R-2000 Inductor Losses | 3.53 W |
4 | IRF250-MOSFET Losses (KY) | 5.98 W |
5 | Overall Losses in the MPC due to MOSFETs, Diodes and Inductors | 32.30 W |
6 | Output Power of Converter | 500 W |
7 | Calculated Efficiency | 93.54% |
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Chandran, I.R.; Ramasamy, S.; Ahsan, M.; Haider, J.; Rodrigues, E.M.G. Implementation of Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Triple Port Converter for Renewable Energy Applications. Electronics 2021, 10, 1681. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10141681
Chandran IR, Ramasamy S, Ahsan M, Haider J, Rodrigues EMG. Implementation of Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Triple Port Converter for Renewable Energy Applications. Electronics. 2021; 10(14):1681. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10141681
Chicago/Turabian StyleChandran, Ilambirai Raghavan, Sridhar Ramasamy, Mominul Ahsan, Julfikar Haider, and Eduardo M. G. Rodrigues. 2021. "Implementation of Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Triple Port Converter for Renewable Energy Applications" Electronics 10, no. 14: 1681. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10141681
APA StyleChandran, I. R., Ramasamy, S., Ahsan, M., Haider, J., & Rodrigues, E. M. G. (2021). Implementation of Non-Isolated Zeta-KY Triple Port Converter for Renewable Energy Applications. Electronics, 10(14), 1681. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10141681