Design of a 100 kHz wide bandgap inverter for motor applications with active damped sine wave filter

Autor: Franz Maislinger, Hans Ertl, Goran Stojcic, Christoph Lagler, Florian Holzner
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
capacitors
invertors
PWM invertors
gallium compounds
power convertors
electromagnetic interference
power filters
machine control
electric current control
damping
insulated gate bipolar transistors
motor drives
100 kHz wide bandgap inverter
motor applications
active damped sine wave filter
three-phase motor inverter
sinusoidal output voltages
gallium nitride transistors
advanced control
standard silicon-insulated gate bipolar transistors
higher feasible switching frequencies
output sine filter component size
EMI behaviour
drive system
inverter-to-motor wiring
motor isolation
two-stage LC filter including motor current control
proportional-integral-type phase current controllers
LC filter damping
capacitor current feedback
active damping scheme
conventional sine filters
guarantees high system efficiency
frequency 100.0 kHz
Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
TA1-2040
Zdroj: The Journal of Engineering (2019)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2051-3305
DOI: 10.1049/joe.2018.8059
Popis: In this study, a three-phase motor inverter with sinusoidal output voltages based on the application of gallium nitride transistors and advanced control is analysed. In comparison to standard silicon-insulated gate bipolar transistors much higher feasible switching frequencies of 100 kHz and above are possible and reduce the output sine filter component size such that the filter can be directly included into the inverter. This considerably improves the electromagnetic interference (EMI) behaviour of the drive system as well as the acoustic noise, eases the inverter-to-motor wiring and protects the motor isolation against high du/dt rates. The study describes the dimensioning and design of the used two-stage LC filter including motor current control based on proportional-integral-type phase current controllers. The LC filter damping is performed actively by capacitor current feedback. Using this active damping scheme avoids additional losses of conventional sine filters and guarantees high system efficiency up to 98%. Finally, experimental results of a laboratory prototype verify the proper behaviour of the proposed concept.
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