Power-Shield: A Powerquality Enhancer for Current-Source Type of Nonlinear Loads
Date
2017
Authors
Gonda, Jora M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Electrical power is the most convenient form of energy-source in terms of generation,
transmission, utilization, and efficiency. It can be converted to any form which is necessary and useful to mankind. The process of conversion has undergone tremendous
changes due to the advancements in the technology and the demand by the consumer.
The efficiency, size, cost, and reliability in the conversion process are important. Power
Electronics has been playing an important role in this process. However due to the
switching action in the power-electronics-converters lot of harmonics are generated.
These harmonics are injected into the power system and they spread across it, some
times even getting amplified. This can affect the operation of other devices connected
to the system, because such currents manifest as harmonic voltages across the power
system network. The voltage disturbances – sag, swell, and switching transients at
the load-point are also of serious concern to the load. The performance and the life
of the electrical equipment suffer in general, while there are some equipment which
are sensitive to the disturbances from the utility side. There are reports of heavy loss
of revenue due to the failure of sensitive equipment. Thus the quality of Electrical
Power provided by the utility and the permissible extent of pollution of the utility grid
by the consumer became important. This has led to the development of the International Standards with the active participation of all the stakeholders – the utility, the
consumer, the equipment manufacturer, the measuring instrument manufacturer, and
the researchers – who play the role of defining the quantities which shall be/ can be
compensated. The violation of these norms is likely to invite heavy penalties.
One class of load drawing nonsinusoidal current from the source is the current-source
type of nonlinear loads or current-stiff nonlinear loads. These loads are found in applications like – the Current-Source Inverter fed Induction Motor and Synchronous
Motors, the DC Motor loads, the Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motors, the battery
charging circuits in the constant-current charging mode, electro plating, high energymagnet applications, the superconducting magnetic energy storage systems, and plugin Electric vehicle battery chargers. While they draw the harmonic currents from the
loads, they are also sensitive to disturbances from the source side.
Considerable amount of work is done towards mitigating the problems due to such
loads and to insulate them from the disturbances from the source. A thorough study
is carried out regarding the sources of distortion, effects of distortion, power theory,
applicable standards, and means for compensation – topology, compensating-signal extraction techniques, modeling, control, and switching techniques. The performance of
different options available are evaluated.
This led to the conceptualization of a multifunction device – Power-Shield that can
shield the source and the load from each other as far as the unwanted disturbances and
pollution are concerned. In this work the philosophy adopted is that of the mission
in IEEE Std. 519:1992, revised in 2014, which prescribes that the utility is responsible
for maintaining a good quality voltage and frequency, and that the consumer shall draw
a near sinusoidal, unity power factor, and balanced current from the source. It is intended to make the load insensitive to the disturbances from the source side and offer
itself as a balanced and linear load on the utility system. The custom power device
Power-Shield is achieved by a judicious choice and combination of the topology and
the control principle. The choice of the topology is validated through the extensive
simulation study. The Power-Shield thus arrived at consists of a low power Parallel
Active Filter, a Series Active Filter, a Parallel Passive Filter (a combination of tuned
(to significant harmonics) filter and a Reactive Power Compensator), and a Commutation Reactance, in that sequence from the utility end to the load end.
Also comprising this thesis are two novel, input-locked (in phase and amplitude) and
synchronized algorithms for the extraction of the compensating quantities and a modified hysteresis switching technique based on the sensing of the voltage at the far-end
(in relation to the injecting converter) of the injection inductor. The algorithms exhibit
a very good transient response of around 60 ms, zero steady-state error, and excellent
noise rejection capability. The novel switching principle proposed here for the sampled
hysteresis control has the attraction of a lesser number of unipolar switchings per cycle
xand a better control over the error band.
A single-phase thyristor controlled rectifier feeding a separately excited DC motor as
an example of a current-stiff load is assembled. Parallel Passive Filters comprising
of capacitor for reactive power compensation and tuned harmonic filters for harmonic
compensation are designed, implemented, and tested. A three-phase IGBT based inverter is fabricated to serve as a single-phase Parallel Active Filter and a half bridge
Series Active Filter. It is tested up to 400 V, 15 A, and at a switching frequency
of 32 kHz. The test results and analysis thereof are presented. It is found that the
topology arrived at demonstrated the superior quality of filtering by rendering the Parallel Passive Filter more effective. The clean switching waveforms across the IGBTs at
that voltage and frequency is a testimony to the quality of fabrication of the converter
circuit.
Description
Keywords
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Power Quality, Current-Source Nonlinear load, Active Power Filtering, Passive Filter, Series Active Filter, Parallel Active Filter, Parallel Passive Filter, Series Passive Filter, International Standards