Review on Control Techniques for EV Bidirectional Wireless Chargers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Mode I, in which the battery is charged with a null power factor. It is a G2V operation.
- Mode II. The battery is discharged with a null power factor in a V2G power transfer.
- Mode III. The controller forces the combination of power converter and battery to consume positive reactive power and null active power. Under this configuration, the system has a pure inductive load on the secondary side.
- Mode IV. With a null active power and a negative reactive power, the load on the secondary side (power converter and battery) represents a pure capacitive load.
- Mode V. The controller can set any point in the area of the first quadrant so there is a positive active and a positive reactive power. The power converter and the battery on the secondary side works as a generic inductive load.
- Mode VI. The active power flows from the battery to the grid, so it is a V2G operation. In addition, the set composed of the secondary power converter and the battery consumes positive reactive power. Thus, it is also an inductive V4G process.
- Mode VII. As in Mode VI, the active power flows from the battery to the grid, but the load on the secondary side generates reactive power, that is, it works as a generic capacitor.
- Mode VIII. In this mode, the power converter and the battery on the secondary side consumes active power flow and generates reactive power.
- Power flow sense. It is possible to control the flowing of the power, that is, if the power flows from the grid to the EV battery or vice versa.
- Four-quadrant operation. Basic control algorithms only focus on the active power, but advanced V2G services also require the control of the reactive power. A relevant feature of the control techniques is the power quadrants (eight modes) on which they can operate.
- It is possible to approximate the active and/or the reactive power in the charging point to reach their corresponding reference power level, even when coil misalignment occurs.
2. V2X Services
2.1. Grid-to-Vehicle (G2V)
2.2. Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G)
2.3. Vehicle-to-Building (V2B)
2.4. Aggregator
3. Model for EV Bidirectional Wireless Charger
4. V2G Control Techniques
4.1. Activation of the Power Converters
4.2. Phase-Delay between the Power Converters
5. Descriptive Works on V2G Control
- Control technique applied, that is, if controllable activation/deactivation of the power converters is used or whether a phase-delay in the activation of these structures is configured.
- The range of adjustment for P and/or Q, and if the setpoint restricts one power once, the other is tuned.
6. Future Trends and Challenges
- Harmonic restriction. The controller must activate and deactivate the switching devices taking into account that the whole system must comply with the harmonic recommendations described in IEEE-519. The consideration of the switching technique when designing the EMI filter could reduce the overall cost of the system and improve its performance.
- Coupler design. Little attention has been paid to the coil design in bidirectional wireless chargers, with just some proposals in [64,77] addressing this topic. Since the power flow is in both senses, the coil design must attend to the magnetic field leakage and variations of the coupling coefficient due to misalignment for the battery charging and discharging process.
- Switching devices. SiC MOSFETs is the predominant choice for bidirectional wireless chargers due to power capability and the supported switching frequency. In order to increase the efficiency of the system, all the diodes are fast body diodes. How to effectively generate the gate signals is still a non-trivial ask as there must be synchronized with other legs in the power converter and even with those in the other power converter [78].
- Synchronisation of the power converters. Achieving precise coordination between the two power converters in real-time must be studied in practical implementations. As stated in [74], the communication delay must be considered with phase-delay approaches. A statistical characterisation of the delay or the use of communication models may be the adequate strategy to incorporate the effects of a typically variable delay in the communication system used between the primary and the secondary sides.
- Synchronisation with the grid. To date, most studies works with the reduced equivalent circuit of the wireless charger. However, if we want to adjust P and Q in the grid interface, we must consider the fact that the grid phase impacts the power factor of the energy delivered to the grid, and consequently, it must be included in the design of the V2G controllers too. Some works on bidirectional conductive chargers base the control on the voltage difference between the grid and the charger. Similar approaches must be deeply studied in the context of wireless chargers.
- Full four-quadrant operation of the system with maximum efficiency. We have observed that there are some works that configure the controller to maximise the efficiency of the power transfer for modes I and II. This optimisation should be extended for other controllers dealing with more operation modes.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Primary | Secondary | Compensation | Operation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Converter | Converter | Networks | Mode | |
[60] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[61] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[62] | Eight-switch leg | Eight-switch leg | Series-Series | I, II |
[63] | Half-bridge | Half-bridge | CLC-LC | All |
(two-switch leg) | (two-switch leg) | (Uncontrolled Q) | ||
[64] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
Reference | Primary | Secondary | Compensation | Operation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Converter | Converter | Networks | Mode | |
[67] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | LCL-LCL | I, II |
[65] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
and DC-DC | ||||
[71] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[69] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[68] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | LCL-LCL | I, II |
[70] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | LCC-LCC | I, II |
[66] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
and DC-DC | ||||
[73] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[59] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | LCL-LCL | I, II |
[74] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | Series-Series | I, II |
[72] | Four-switch leg | Four-switch leg | Series-Series | All |
[75] | Full-bridge | Full-bridge | LCL-LCL | All |
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Triviño, A.; Gonzalez-Gonzalez, J.M.; Castilla, M. Review on Control Techniques for EV Bidirectional Wireless Chargers. Electronics 2021, 10, 1905. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10161905
Triviño A, Gonzalez-Gonzalez JM, Castilla M. Review on Control Techniques for EV Bidirectional Wireless Chargers. Electronics. 2021; 10(16):1905. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10161905
Chicago/Turabian StyleTriviño, Alicia, Jose M. Gonzalez-Gonzalez, and Miguel Castilla. 2021. "Review on Control Techniques for EV Bidirectional Wireless Chargers" Electronics 10, no. 16: 1905. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10161905
APA StyleTriviño, A., Gonzalez-Gonzalez, J. M., & Castilla, M. (2021). Review on Control Techniques for EV Bidirectional Wireless Chargers. Electronics, 10(16), 1905. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10161905