Unidirectional Hybrid Three-Phase Rectifier with Boost Converter and Coupled Inductor
Abstract
:1. Introduction
HTR with Boost Converter
- The coupled inductor was not characterized in details;
- The control circuit applied was not through a specific integrated circuit;
- It was not presented how to eliminate the coupling that may arise between the power circuit and the control circuit.
2. Modeling and Implementation of the Proposed UHTR
2.1. Power Circuit
- Gab (IGBT gate to connect to Rectifier 1 control circuit);
- (IGBT gate to connect to the respective modules of the Rectifier 2 control circuit);
- (current sensor signal in Rectifier 1 boost converter);
- (hybrid rectifier input current sensors signal);
- (hybrid rectifier input voltage);
- (hybrid rectifier output voltage).
2.1.1. Inductor
2.1.2. Discordant Sense Coupled Inductor
2.2. Interface Circuit
- Current sensors: The inductor current signal is obtained by means of current sensors with galvanic isolation. In Rectifier 1, the current sensor is installed on the positive polarity of the Boost converter and, therefore, does not require a precision rectifier, just a polarity inverter, as described in the control circuit. For Rectifier 2, the AC at the input of each phase of the hybrid rectifier is monitored.
- Current precision rectifier: The output signal of the current sensor (AC) is thus rectified by a current precision rectifier (CPR) in negative polarity. The CPR consists mainly of three operational amplifiers, the first two of which are designed for proper rectification and the last is a Buffer circuit [2,17]. Figure 5a shows the CPR of just one phase.
- Voltage precision rectifier: The rms voltages obtained from the voltage sensor were rectified by a precision rectifier in positive polarity. In this case, the precision rectifier mainly consists of three operational amplifiers, the first two of which are designed to rectify the appropriate voltage, and the last one is a Voltage Buffer (voltage follower), as shown in Figure 5b [2,17].
- AC voltage sensor: The input voltage sensors used are transformers in each phase, with a ratio of 220 V/6 V (sensor gain = 0.0273) in star-star configuration, as shown in Figure 6a. In this way, the voltages , , , are obtained, which are images of the input voltages. Three resistors connected in a star are also applied as a load to the output of the transformers, with the central point connected to the ground of the control circuit, serving as a virtual neutral. To avoid high frequency noise above hundreds of Hz, 56 nF capacitors were added in parallel with the resistors.
- DC voltage sensor: To control the output voltage of the DC bus, the output voltage loop circuit is created, which mainly consists of an output voltage sensor (sensor gain, = 0.00329), a voltage signal amplifier and then the respective voltage compensator [2,17], as shown in Figure 6b.According to the methodology for adjusting the voltage compensator parameters, the frequencies determined are:
- ;
- ;
- ;
- .
Depending on the frequencies, the components of the voltage compensator are determined, shown in Figure 6b. - Current level regulator circuit: The voltage compensator output voltage can be used to control the current level that the power circuit processes through an additional circuit [4], as is the case with the current level regulator current shown in Figure 7. In this case, the current level regulator allows to regulate (control) the voltage and thus change the current level at the rectifier input. It consists of two circuits, an amplifier and then an inverter, as shown in Figure 7 [2,17]. Although the voltage sensor and voltage compensator are exclusive to the two rectifiers (Rectifier 1 and Rectifier 2), the current level regulator circuit must be one for each rectifier. Thus, as the current level in Regulator 1 changes, the current in Rectifier 2 is compensated, and vice versa [4].
- Feed-forward voltage circuit: The circuit applied to the feed-forward voltage loop is shown in Figure 8a. It can be seen that the circuit consists of a three-resistance voltage adder (to generate the voltage ), an operational amplifier (to generate the voltage ) and a voltage divider with a filter (to generate the voltage ).
- Programmable reference voltage of Rectifier 1: For Rectifier 1 to impose a current waveform as represented in Figure 3a, it is necessary that the programmable reference voltage injected into the control circuit is a constant voltage and proportional to the voltage effective input, for which the voltage is used from the feed-forward voltage circuit. The circuit used to generate the programmable reference voltage is represented in Figure 8b.
- On/off control mode circuit.
- Auxiliary sources.
2.3. Control Circuit
- For the Rectifier 1 current loop, the Boost 1 inductor current signal () is applied;
- For the current loop of Rectifier 2, the input current signals, and the reference voltage signals, , are applied;
- On the other hand, the signal is applied to the voltage loop to obtain and this is used for the current loop of the two rectifiers.
- (PWM for Rectifier 1 IGBT gate);
- (PWM for Rectifier 2 IGBT gate);
- (Rectifier 1 Boost inductor current);
- (phase A rectified current);
- (Voltage compensator control voltage for Rectifier 1);
- (Voltage compensator control voltage for Rectifier 2);
- (programmable reference voltage for Rectifier 1);
- (programmable reference voltage for Rectifier 2);
- (feed-forward voltage);
- (7.5 V reference voltage);
- DC22V (22 V integrated circuit power supply);
- ENA (5 V power supply for on/off control mode).
3. Simulation Results
3.1. Rectifier Input Parameters
3.2. Rectifier Output Parameters
3.3. Rectifier Performance
3.4. Power Distribution
3.5. Comparison
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameter | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
rms line voltage | 380 V | |
Grid frequency | 50 Hz | |
Rated output voltage | 760 V | |
Output power | 20 kW | |
Load | ||
Output Condenser | ||
Switching frequency | 50 kHz | |
Rectifier 1 boost inductor | ||
Rectifier 2 Coupled Inductor | ||
Mutual inductance | ||
Rectifier 1 current sensor gain | 0.14 | |
Rectifier 2 current sensor gain | 0.07 | |
Output voltage sensor gain | 0.00329 |
Phase | (V) | (A) | S (kVA) | P (kW) | PF (%) | THD (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase A | 220 | 30.33 | 6.653 | 6.648 | 99.92 | 3.96 |
Phase B | 220 | 30.32 | 6.649 | 6.643 | 99.92 | 3.96 |
Phase C | 220 | 30.33 | 6.654 | 6.649 | 99.92 | 3.96 |
Phase | P(kW)-R1 | P(kW)-R2 | P(kW)-HR | P(%)-R1 | P(%)-R2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase A | 3.639 | 3.009 | 6.648 | 54.74 | 45.26 |
Phase B | 3.640 | 3.008 | 6.648 | 54.75 | 45.25 |
Phase C | 3.640 | 3.009 | 6.649 | 54.75 | 45.25 |
Total | 10.92 | 9.03 | 19.95 | 54.75 | 45.28 |
(kΩ) | P (kW)-R1 | P (kW)-R2 | P (kW)-HR | P (%)-R1 | PF (%) | THDi (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | 5.96 | 13.98 | 19.94 | 29.89 | 99.93 | 3.45 |
5 | 10.92 | 9.02 | 19.94 | 54.75 | 99.92 | 3.96 |
8 | 15.21 | 4.73 | 19.94 | 76.28 | 99.68 | 7.97 |
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Gonçalves, J.T.; Valtchev, S.; Luis, E.; Blaabjerg, F. Unidirectional Hybrid Three-Phase Rectifier with Boost Converter and Coupled Inductor. Electronics 2024, 13, 1864. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13101864
Gonçalves JT, Valtchev S, Luis E, Blaabjerg F. Unidirectional Hybrid Three-Phase Rectifier with Boost Converter and Coupled Inductor. Electronics. 2024; 13(10):1864. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13101864
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonçalves, José Teixeira, Stanimir Valtchev, Euclides Luis, and Frede Blaabjerg. 2024. "Unidirectional Hybrid Three-Phase Rectifier with Boost Converter and Coupled Inductor" Electronics 13, no. 10: 1864. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13101864
APA StyleGonçalves, J. T., Valtchev, S., Luis, E., & Blaabjerg, F. (2024). Unidirectional Hybrid Three-Phase Rectifier with Boost Converter and Coupled Inductor. Electronics, 13(10), 1864. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13101864