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ECTE324-8324-lecture Slides-Wk9-2018 PDF

This document discusses a lecture on power electronics. It covers topics including linear amplifiers, power electronic switches like diodes, thyristors, MOSFETs and IGBTs. It also discusses rectifier circuits which are used to convert AC to DC and their applications in devices like switched mode power supplies. Relationship between AC and DC power in loads with feedback to maintain constant output is also covered.

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TuanHung
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
109 views

ECTE324-8324-lecture Slides-Wk9-2018 PDF

This document discusses a lecture on power electronics. It covers topics including linear amplifiers, power electronic switches like diodes, thyristors, MOSFETs and IGBTs. It also discusses rectifier circuits which are used to convert AC to DC and their applications in devices like switched mode power supplies. Relationship between AC and DC power in loads with feedback to maintain constant output is also covered.

Uploaded by

TuanHung
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 38

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1

Week 9

Prof. Sarath Perera


Phone: 4221 3405 Room: 35-G33

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 1 / 38


Topics for Today

• Power Electronics

◦ Introduction

◦ Linear Amplifiers

• The Diode Rectifier (ac to dc).

• The Chopper (dc to dc).

• The Inverter (dc to ac).

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 2 / 38


Topic 7: Introduction to Power Electronics

• Power conversion: modify electric power at high efficiency.

◦ i.e. change frequency, voltage, waveform, no of phases etc.

• Power electronics: study of electronic switching circuits for power


conversion

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 3 / 38


Power Electronics

• Applications.

◦ Electronic power supplies (ac → LV dc) in computers, office


equipment, entertainment, communications, broadcasting etc.

◦ AC motor speed control (ac → variable f and V ac) in manufacturing


processes, machine tools, robots, transport

◦ Frequency conversion (ac → another ac) in lighting, induction


furnaces

◦ Renewable power supplies (photovoltaic, wind) where variable LV dc


and variable ac → fixed ac

◦ Battery supplied equipment (laptop computers, mobile phones, etc)


variable dc gives several fixed dc

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 4 / 38


Power Electronics

• Classification of power conversion by frequency conversion:

TO
AC DC
AC Cycloconverter and Matrix Converter Rectifier
FROM
DC Inverter Chopper

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 5 / 38


Linear Amplifiers

• Linear amplifiers are not suitable for high power applications.


(1) vT
Is
R
ns that the device T vdc T Vo
e desired voltage

r) is continually
linear power supply
produce constant

• According to KVL,
Vo = Vdc − VT

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 6 / 38


Linear Amplifiers

• Linear amplifier means that the device T is controlled to give the desired
voltage across R continuously.

• Although Vdc (output from a rectifier) is continually varying, VT tracks it to


produce constant Vo using a complex feedback circuit.

• Hence linear power supply problems arise:

◦ control device dissipates a lot of power and needs large heat sink

◦ circuit is inefficient

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 7 / 38


Linear Amplifier Example

A linear amplifier with a 20 V supply has a 10 Ω resistor to be supplied at 5 V. What is (i) the
load power, (ii) device loss, (iii) circuit efficiency?

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 8 / 38


Power Electronic Switches

• Power Diode
A C

◦ anode, cathode

◦ forward and reverse directions

◦ device can conduct in forward direction (s/c) and blocks in reverse


direction

◦ available ratings 5 kV, 5 kA, useful to hundreds of kHz at lower ratings

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 9 / 38


Power Electronic Switches

• Thyristor or Silicon Controller Rectifier (SCR)


G

A C

ction if triggered at the gate


◦ anode, cathode and gate (control terminal)

◦ forward and reverse directions

◦ device can conduct in forward direction if triggered at the gate


terminal (s/c) and blocks in reverse direction

◦ power gain better than 106

◦ available ratings 5 kV, 3 kA, useful to 500 Hz

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 10 / 38


Power Electronic Switches

• Power MOSFET - Metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor.


oxide semiconductor field- D

◦ source, drain and gate (control terminal)

◦ forward and reverse directions

◦ available ratings 1200 V, 10 A, 50 kHz

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 11 / 38


Power Electronic Switches

• IGBT - Insulated gate bipolar transistor


C

E
as linear amplifier with v
◦ emitter, collector, gate (control terminal)

◦ forward and reverse directions

◦ device can be operated as linear amplifier with V control at gate

◦ available ratings 2 kV, 500 A, 20 kHz

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 12 / 38


Power Electronics

• The power system must operate at a constant voltage and frequency.

• There are many devices that require different voltages and frequencies.

• Power electronics provides a way to convert from one voltage to another


at various frequencies.

◦ Modern appliances all demand electronic power supply with a mix of


dc voltages.

◦ Modern drive systems (electric motors) utilise variable speeds.

◦ Renewable energy generation doesn’t always natively provide the


correct voltage level or frequency.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 13 / 38


Power Electronic Devices

• A variety of devices used on power electronic applications have been


presented.

◦ Diode

◦ Thyristor or SCR

◦ MOSFET

◦ IGBT

• These devices for the basis of numerous power conversion circuits.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 14 / 38


Rectifier Circuit

• Used to convert AC to DC.

• For example, electronic power supply front end, ac motor drive supply
front end.

D1 D2
io
is
vs C vo
Single phase full
wave bridge to dc load eg SMPS,
rectifier circuit ac drive etc

D3 D4

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 15 / 38


Rectifier Waveforms

• Load voltage vo is not smooth.

• Supply current is is not sinusoidal.


sinusoidal
is (with C)
vs
vo (with C)

vo (without C)
v ripple 'V

• If ripple is not too high,



Vo = 2Vs = Vpk

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 16 / 38


Rectifier Application in an SMPS

• The term ‘Switched Mode Power Supply’ (SMPS) refers to a family of


devices that
are able to convert from one voltage to another using a switching regulator.
voltage sensing

control hf
circuit dc output #1
rectifier

Vo I 0

mains lf hf
supply inverter dc output #2
rectifier rectifier

hf transformers with multiple secondaries

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 17 / 38


Relationship Between AC and DC

• Many rectifier loads have feedback to ensure constant output dc power


for a wide range of ac input voltages.

• E.g. a switched mode power supply (SMPS) set at 10 V will deliver a


fixed 10 V at a fixed current.

◦ Hence it will supply constant output power although ac voltage


changes.

◦ Assuming its efficiency is roughly constant, it will accept constant


power input.
Po = Pload /η
where η is 75-99%.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 18 / 38


Relationship Between AC and DC

• If supply rectifier output Vo reduces, Io will increase to maintain constant


power into SMPS.

• Hence the line current increases as the supply voltage reduces.

Io = Po /Vo

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 19 / 38


SMPS Example

A rectifier is the front end of a SMPS with an output of 15 V, 5 A and an efficiency of 75%.
Determine Io if Vo is 319 V.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 20 / 38


Capacitor Selection

• The capacitor at the output of rectifier should be chosen based on


acceptable current and ripple voltage.

• Assume dc load is drawing an approximate constant current Io

• T = 1/f where f is the supply frequency

dv
i=C
dt
• Take worse case of decay over half period 1/2f

∆V
Io = C
1/2f
giving
Io
∆V =
2f C

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 21 / 38


Capacitor Selection

• Alternatively
Io
C=
2f ∆V

• Also if the maximum dc voltage is the supply voltage peak

Vo = Vpk − ∆V /2

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 22 / 38


Capacitor Choice Example

In the previous example, what should be the value of C to keep Vo at 319 V?

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 23 / 38


Hold-up Time

• This is the time in cycles that the circuit can continue to operate if the
supply fails.

• It gives an idea of how long a power system fault has to be before a dc


power supply will fail.

• Increasing C gives better smoothing and increases hold-up time.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 24 / 38


Hold-up Time

• Suppose the rectifier output is normally Vo and the dc load can operate
successfully with voltage as low as Vo1 .

• Let THU be the hold-up time.

• As C discharges and Vo falls, Io increases so difficult to use


i = Cdv/dt. Can use an energy approach instead:
• E = Pt

• Which leads to:


0.5C(Vo2 − Vo12 ) = Po THU

• Or
C(Vo2 − Vo12 )
THU =
2Po
ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 25 / 38
Hold-up Time Example

If the previous rectifier uses C =250 µF, Vs =230 V, and Vo1 = 230 V. For a load of 100 W,
what is the hold-up time?

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 26 / 38


The Chopper

• Convert DC to DC, especially where the DC needs to be controlled.

• E.g. Battery operated vehicles, trains etc.

The
DC Input Chopper
From rectifer, Chopper DC Output Load
battery etc

Control and Feedback

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 27 / 38


Chopper With Resistive Load

• Vo can only take values of 0 or Vdc .


vo
+ Vs
Vdc vo (1) on-time Ton
+ - (2) off-time Toff
- (3) period T = Ton + Toff
S (1) (2) t
(3)

Ton
• Duty Cycle, D =
T

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 28 / 38


Chopper Average Voltage

• Let Vo = avg(vo ), then Vo = DVdc

Vo/Vdc
1

D
1

• Problem: if load is inductive, S will be destroyed when it opens.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 29 / 38


Chopper With Inductive Load

io

• Need to modify circuit so that: L


Df vo
◦ vo goes to zero when S turns off
Vdc R
◦ io is not suddenly interrupted +
-
• The solution is a freewheel diode Df . S

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 30 / 38


Freewheel Diode Operation

• io is almost constant because of L

• S on: io flows through S, Vo = Vdc

• S off: io flows through Df , Vo = 0

• Hence, the relationship Vo = DVdc still holds.

io

t
S on S off S on S off
Df reversed-biased

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 31 / 38


Freewheel Diode Operation

• Voltage seen by RL has a dc component.

• By Superposition, Io = Vo /R

• Since the average voltage across RL is the same as across just R, the
average voltage across L is zero.

• This also follows from L being a short circuit under dc conditions.

• If S switches at a high enough frequency then io ≈ constant

• This is usually assumed in the analysis of chopper circuits.

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 32 / 38


Inverter

• Convert DC to AC with control over voltage and frequency.

• e.g.: ac motor drives, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS).


vo

S1 S2
Vdc
vo
+ io
-
S3 S4
left S1 S3
right S4 S2

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 33 / 38


Inverter With RL Load

• The freewheeling diode is utilised once again.


S1, S4 on vo

io

S1 D1 D2 S2
Vdc vo
+ io

- S2, S3 on

S3 D3 D4 S4 left D1 S1 D3 S3
right D4 S4 D2 S2

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 34 / 38


Inverter Current Paths

+ +
- -

D1, D4 on S1, S4 on
Power fed back to supply Power taken from supply

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 35 / 38


Control of Voltage-Sinusoidal PWM (SPWM)

• The sinusoidal reference waveform is divided into several sections.

• Each section is approximated by a pulse having the same area.

reference sinewave

identical areas
inverter output

one switching
period of inverter

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 36 / 38


SPWM - Spectrum
ectrum
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0 2mf 4mf 6mf 8mf 10mf

ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 37 / 38


Inverter Filtering

SPWM
inverter XL1

dc load
supply XC XL2
connection

• High quality outputs can be obtained from fixed frequency inverters (e.g.
UPS, remote PV generators) by addition of filter at output.

• Series inductor L1 to decouple HF harmonics in inverter from load.

• Shunt capacitor C to bypass harmonic current around load. C and L1


act as a low pass 2nd order filter using voltage divider action.
ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1 Week 9 – 38 / 38

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