Research trends of modular multilevel cascade inverter (MMCI-DSCC)-based medium-voltage motor drives in a low-speed range — Yuhei Okazaki (2014) | RDL Network
Research trends of modular multilevel cascade inverter (MMCI-DSCC)-based medium-voltage motor drives in a low-speed range
Article 2014 English
Authors
YO
Yuhei Okazaki
HM
Hitoshi Matsui
MH
Makoto Hagiwara
Abstract
1 min read
A modular multilevel cascade inverter based on double-star chopper cells (MMCI-DSCC) has been expected as one of the next-generation multilevel PWM inverters for medium-voltage high-power motor drives. This inverter consists of cascaded bidirectional chopper cells with dc capacitors. One of concerns for the motor drive is how to achieve stable operation in a low-speed range. Some kind of solution should be taken to achieve stable operation in a low-speed range, because ac-voltage fluctuations in the dc capacitors are inversely proportional to an inverter frequency. This paper describes state-of-the-art research trends in MMCI-DSCC-based motor drives, especially focusing on the mitigation of the ac-voltage fluctuations. Four kinds of mitigation methods including the proposed ones are summarized, compared, and verified by experiments using a 400-V 15-kW downscaled system. The steady-state waveforms show the validity of the theoretical analysis on the peak current in IGBTs, and start-up waveforms show the stable operation from a standstill to 740 min <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">-1</sup> with 60% load torque.
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