The invention relates to an adaptive controlling method for controlling energy supplied by an electrical source to a resonance tank connectable to an electric load.
A resonant tank includes at least one inductance and at least one capacitance so that electrical energy can be stored in the tank. In certain applications a resonance tank can be used as an intermediate electrical energy reservoir that is fed by a particular electrical source and that might be loaded by a varying electrical load.
Since the signal behavior of the electrical source and a desired electrical behavior at the electrical load side typically do not coincide with the electrical signals in the resonant tank, an input converter and an output converter is interconnected between the resonant tank on one side, and the source and the load on the other side, respectively. The converter is arranged for transforming the frequency of the signal as well as controlling a desired amplitude at the load, so that an electrical load such as a domestic appliance may function properly. Thereto, in prior art systems, a voltage at the load is controlled, so that a variety of load impedances can be coupled to the resonance tank while maintaining voltage requirements.
It is an object of the invention to improve an adaptive controlling method for controlling energy supplied by an electrical source to a resonance tank connectable to an electric load. Thereto, the method according to the invention further comprises the step of determining an energy amount to be supplied based on information of energy in the resonance tank.
The invention is at least partially based on the insight that voltage controlled converters are not optimal from an energetic point of view. An accurate study of such a system reveals that in general more energy is supplied to the resonance tank than is needed in a particular situation, thereby causing more copper losses in the tank than would be necessary.
The invention is further at least partly based on the insight that energy information of the resonance tank includes in principle all information regarding matching the source and the one or multiple number of electrical loads.
It appears that, by determining an energy amount to be supplied to the tank, based on information of energy in the resonance tank, a more efficient control of energy to the tank and the load can be obtained, thus leading to an energy supply system having an improved performance from an energetic point of view. As a consequence, components and materials used in the chain from the source to the load are optimally used.
According to an embodiment according to the invention, a buffer component of the resonance tank energy is controlled to remain strictly positive, so that the tank always contains enough energy to supply the electrical loads connected to it. As an alternative, the buffer component of the tank energy is allowed to become negative temporarily, thus achieving a very energy efficient scheme. However, energy requirements at the load side are then weakened.
According to a further embodiment according to the invention, a buffer component of the resonance tank energy is minimized in the controlling process, so that an excess of energy in the resonance tank is counteracted, thus providing an energy efficient system.
Further, the invention relates to an adaptive controller.
The invention also relates to a computer program product. A computer program product may comprise a set of computer executable instructions stored on a data carrier, such as a CD or a DVD. The set of computer executable instructions, which allow a programmable computer to carry out the method as defined above, may also be available for downloading from a remote server, for example via the Internet.
Other advantageous embodiments according to the invention are described in the following claims.
By way of example only, an embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying figures in which
The figures are merely schematic views of a preferred embodiment according to the invention. In the figures, the same reference numbers refer to equal or corresponding parts.
In order to connect an electrical load to the electric supply line 7, a magnetic ferrite kernel 10a-c can be shifted around a section of the electric supply line 7 that forms a primary coil. Through the opening of the magnetic ferrite kernel 10a-c also a secondary coil 11a-c extends so that a transformer element is formed. The secondary coil 11a-c is connected to an output converter 12a-c for converting the resonance signal to a harmonic signal that is suitable for powering the electrical load 13a-c, viz. a 230 V, 50 Hz signal. Since the electrical load 13a-c is inductively connected, there is no danger for an electrical short cut.
During operation of the adaptive controller according to the invention, information of energy in the resonance tank is used as a basis for determining an energy amount to be supplied to the resonance tank.
It is noted that the ripple in the total energy is associated with an instantaneous buffer component of the resonance tank energy. In the process of controlling an amount of energy to be supplied to the tank, the instantaneous buffer component might be set strictly positive while the component is also minimized. Thus, the energy buffer component is used as a basis of information of energy in the resonance tank for the purpose of determining an energy amount to be supplied to the resonance tank.
Advantageously, a filtered increase of resonance tank energy is integrated and subsequently controlled to a value depending on energy supplied to the resonance tank. As an example, said value might be related to the supplied energy in a linear or quadratic way. Depending on a particular application, a proper relation of said value with the supplied energy can be established. Further, the time scale of the filtering process is then different, preferably larger than the time scale of the integrating process, so that a filtered increase of the instantaneous energy buffer component is integrated and related to said value depending on energy supplied to the resonance tank.
Resonance tank energy information can be determined by measuring at least one physical parameter associated with the resonance tank, e.g. an electrical current and/or an electrical voltage.
A control objective, such as relating a filtered increase of resonance tank energy to a value depending on energy supplied to the resonance tank, can be implemented in various ways, e.g. depending on the converter type and switch stage type. As an example, pulse width modulation (PWM), phase-shift modulation (PSM) or frequency modulation (FM) can be employed. Also a combination is possible. As a further example, a quantum conversion (QC) modulation method can be used wherein the modulation is controlled synchronous with the resonance frequency of the resonance tank.
Further, different control algorithms can be applied, both linear and non-linear. As an example, a controller based on sliding-mode control theory is explained in more detail below. In order to arrive at a specific controlling method, one or more control objects have to be rewritten as a valid sliding surface.
A key observation is that the tank transfers energy from one quantum period to the next, although each of the tank components discharges completely during a (quantum) period. Next important observation is the fact that the resonant inductor Lr can not transfer energy between periods, because by definition a consecutive period starts with zero current, and therefore with an energetic empty resonant inductor. The buffer energy is rewritten into (3).
The right-hand side of (1) is provided in (4).
E
buf
The input sliding surface—related to the input converter—then follows in (5) as the difference of equations (3) and (4).
The purpose of (5) is to become zero, which implies that (5) can be divided by the average of ir.
While surface (6) is the basic sliding surface, a rewritten form is better suited for mathematical analysis. First step is to rewrite the second right hand term in (6) into (7).
v
insgn(ir)≡Vinup (7)
In (7), the DC input voltage is denoted Vin and the control input is denoted by up. The left term is rewritten by noting that
where C is a constant dependent on the resonant capacitor value and the angular resonant frequency:
The motivation behind the (close) approximation (8) is that applying the low-pass filter on vr sgn(ir) is equivalent to the average of ir (up to the constant C), when accepting the loss of phase information between voltage and current. Though, one of the strengths of quantum conversion is that phase information is not used at all, because switching occurs only at zero resonant current. If for example the control method would be applied to a different conversion method than quantum conversion (e.g., PWM or FM, see previous paragraph), (8) would not be true.
Substitution of (7) and (8) in sliding surface (6) leads to the rewritten sliding surface (9). Note that phase information is also discarded from the second right hand term by only using the magnitude of the filter.
Interpreting (9), the first right hand side term represents the buffer energy in the resonant tank when it is multiplied by the resonant current. The second term represents a fraction α of the supplied energy, when also multiplied by the resonant current. Note that both terms originally contained the same resonant current factor ir, which has been left out of the equation, but the energetic origin of the terms is still clear.
The intuitive reason that (9) ‘works’ is that the supplied energy reacts little more slowly than the buffer tank energy. For example, adopting the common control law (10), it is clear that the buffer will grow faster than the average supplied energy when Sp>0 and as a result Sp becomes <0, and vice versa.
In the following a formal proof of the validness of (candidate) sliding surface (9) is provided. In sliding-mode control theory the following 3 conditions must be formally met to guarantee stable closed-loop operation: Reaching condition, Existence condition and Stability condition.
Reaching considers the fact that the control law must assure to reach the sliding surface (in finite time) starting from all possible initial states. Existence means that the system dynamics must be able to stay at the sliding surface once it is reached. The stability condition considers internal stability of the closed-loop system. Sliding mode control design effectively linearizes the non-linear plant system, but those invisible reminiscent terms must be checked on stability also.
We start with forming the closed-loop system dynamics with the help of the sliding surfaces. First step is to put Sp equal to zero. Rewriting (9) with Sp=0 results in (11).
in the averaged state-space model (i.e., (0a) and (0b)) leads to the following expression for up in (12). The terms usj denote the control variables of the output switching bridges.
Substituting (12) in (0a) leads to a linear first-order differential expression in īr2, which is given in (13).
Equation (13) contains the entire dynamics of the closed-loop system. Consulting linear system analysis, stability of the linear system is assured when
Rewriting the latter equations leads to the stability condition for α in (14).
This shows the upper bound of a for which the system is stable. Result of choosing a larger than the bound in (14) is an unlimited increase of stored energy in the primary circuit. There is no lower bound from a stability point of view, because we look from the primary side (assuming the secondary side dynamics being situated at the sliding surface) and the system will converge to zero-power throughput in the worst case. See FIG. x2 for an illustration.
The existence conditions will put a lower bound for α, in order to assure stable regime; enough input power to supply the secondary sides.
For the outputs the existence conditions are straightforward:
Condition (15) simply states that the input current must be larger than load current plus the current through the output filter capacitor.
The input existence condition is the most interesting one. The conditions follow from the fact that the equivalent input control parameter must be between 0 and 1: 0<up,eq<1. Setting the equivalent input larger than 0 leads to (16).
Note that in (16) the radial frequency is the cut-off frequency of the low-pass filter and not the resonant frequency. Equation (16) reflects the idea that the ‘filtered’ impedance of the averaged resonant tank must be smaller than the loss resistance in order to have enough real damping. In other words, the resonant tank must be able to release its energy fast enough.
The remaining condition, up,eq<1, reveals when the buffer-energy percentage in the resonant tank is enough to assure local stability.
Substituting for up eq the expression in (12) and rewriting, the final condition follows in (17).
Expression (17) has the structure of an energy balance. On the right hand side, ‘loss’ terms are present. To be precise, from left to right: copper loss energy, virtual resonant tank energy, filter capacitor energy and load energy. The ‘virtual’ energy will be explained shortly. On the left hand side of (17) source terms are present. The left-most term is clearly the averaged input energy, while the right term represents the averaged stored resonant tank energy.
The virtual energy term with a turns out to be a safety measure. It represents the dynamics of the resonant tank in essence. The momentary resonant tank energy can not be viewed as a term completely available (to compensate instantaneously) for the loss energies, because when the tank is empty it must be charged, before it can transfer energy again.
The control parameter α is a function of
The following simplification is justified by the fact that interest is in a (rough) design guidance value for α; in practice the value for a will be tuned by observation.
Returning to expression (13), the simplification consists of assuming zero ripple in ir(t), which makes the left hand side of (13) equal to 0. Rewriting (13) results in an approximate expression for
In (18), Poj replaces
Substitution of (18) in (17) and rearranging terms leads to design condition (19).
In the following the previous design conditions are applied to a design example. Table 1 shows values for the parameters as introduced in
Stability is assured when (14) applies:
The sliding surface for the output exists if (15) holds, where expression (18) is substituted for
The input sliding surface exists if (19) holds:
Combining the previous conditions, the design solution gives:
1.24<α<9.7 (20)
Whereas α represents the fraction of the input energy that is used for the buffer energy in the tank, the best (i.e., most energy efficient) solution for α is the minimum allowed value in (20).
The adaptive controlling method for controlling energy supplied by an electrical source to a resonance tank connectable to an electric load can be performed using dedicated hardware structures, such as FPGA and/or ASIC components. Otherwise, the method can also at least partially be performed using a computer program product comprising instructions for causing a processor of the computer system to perform the above described one or more steps of the method according to the invention. All steps can in principle be performed on a single processor. However it is noted that at least one step can be performed on a separate processor, e.g. the step of minimizing a buffer component of the resonance tank energy.
The invention is not restricted to the embodiments described herein. It will be understood that many variants are possible.
It is noted that the electric supply network according to the invention might in principle be arranged in building rooms having an arbitrary room geometry, such as in a house or in an office.
It is further noted that the resonance tank can be formed otherwise, e.g. as a capacitor arranged in parallel with the coil of the electric supply line. Further, the electrical loads might be arranged in parallel with the resonance tank.
The resonance tank can not only be implemented as a first order LC-circuit but also as a higher order circuit including more than two reactive elements.
It is also noted that, as an alternative to an inductive connection, one or more electrical loads might be connected to the resonance tank by using an electrically conducting connection without eliminating the operation of the adaptive controller according to the invention.
Other such variants will be obvious for the person skilled in the art and are considered to lie within the scope of the invention as formulated in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003450 | Sep 2009 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL2010/050570 | 9/8/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/15/2012 |