The invention relates to a diesel-electric drive system as claimed in the precharacterizing clause of claim 1.
A drive system of this generic type is disclosed in the publication entitled “Energy Efficient Drive System for a Diesel Electric Shunting Locomotive”, by Olaf Koerner, Jens Brand and Karsten Rechenberg, printed in the “EPE'2005” Conference Proceedings, from the EPE Conference in Dresden on Sep. 11-14, 2005. This publication compares two diesel-electric drive systems having a synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation, with one another. These two drive systems differ only in that the generator-side converter of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter is formed on the one hand by a diode rectifier and on the other hand by a self-commutated pulse-controlled converter. In this publication, the self-commutated pulse-controlled converter is referred to as an IGBT rectifier. A braking resistance in both drive systems can be connected to the intermediate circuit of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter. A thyristor which can be turned off is provided for this purpose, and is also referred to as a gate turn-off thyristor (GTO thyristor). By means of this pulse resistance, the DC voltage in the intermediate circuit of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter supplies energy in the braking mode, that is to say the load, in particular a rotating-field machine, into the intermediate circuit, thus ensuring that the maximum permissible intermediate-circuit voltage is not exceeded. A portion of this braking power is used to compensate for the drag of the idling diesel engine. This has the disadvantage that a further converter bridge arm must be used for the brake controller, and the additional rail system of the brake controller must be provided with the intermediate-circuit rail system. In this case, care must be taken to ensure that the brake controller should be connected with low impedance.
Depending on the braking torque, it is possible that it may be necessary to use further converter bridge arms for the brake controller, which are connected electrically in parallel. In addition, a control apparatus is required for the thyristor which can be turned off. Furthermore, the thyristor which can be turned off and is used as a brake controller has a complex circuitry network, which requires a corresponding amount of space.
DE 102 10 164 A1 discloses an apparatus for multiple rectifier feeding of a synchronous motor with permanent-magnet excitation in a power station. This synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation has two polyphase stator winding systems with different numbers of turns. One winding system is connected to a controlled rectifier, for example to an IGBT rectifier. The purpose of this controlled rectifier is to regulate the power output and thus the rotation speed of the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation. For this purpose, current flows in the low rotation speed range, and the electrical power therefore flows exclusively via this winding system and thus via the controlled rectifier which is connected to a DC voltage intermediate circuit. The second winding system is connected to an uncontrolled rectifier, for example through a multipulse diode bridge, which is likewise connected to the same DC voltage intermediate circuit as the controlled rectifier. If the line (that is to say phase-to-phase) rotation voltage (also referred to as the rotor voltage) is greater than the intermediate-circuit voltage in the DC voltage intermediate circuit, a current can flow in the second winding system, and is rectified via the uncontrolled rectifier to the DC voltage intermediate circuit. In this case, because of the magnetic coupling between the first and the second winding system, the amplitude and phase angle of the current in the second winding system are influenced by the current in the first winding system, which is regulated by the active rectifier (controlled rectifier). This means that the current in the winding system of the uncontrolled rectifier can also be regulated to a certain extent with the aid of the controlled rectifier. The power transmission of this apparatus is carried mainly by the uncontrolled rectifier, which means that the controlled rectifier is designed for a low power, and therefore costs little. This controlled rectifier, which is in general also referred to as a self-commutated pulse-controlled converter, avoids highly overexcited operation of the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation. Furthermore, this compensates for harmonics in the generator moment, caused by the uncontrolled rectifier.
The invention is now based on the object of improving the diesel-electric drive system of this generic type such that there is no need for an additional brake controller.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the characterizing features of claim 1 in conjunction with the features of its prechracterizing clause.
Since a braking resistance can be electrically conductively connected by means of a switching apparatus at each generator-side connection of the generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converter of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter, this self-commutated pulse-controlled converter additionally carries out the task of braking current regulation. There is therefore no need for a brake controller for the intermediate circuit of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter.
In one advantageous embodiment of this electrical drive system, the voltage intermediate-circuit converter has a further self-commutated pulse-controlled converter on the generator side, which is connected on the DC voltage side to the DC voltage intermediate circuit of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter, with these two generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters each being linked on the AC voltage side to one connection of a first and second inductor, with a second connection of each first inductor being linked by means of the switching apparatus to the braking resistance and by means of a further switching apparatus and a stator-side connection of the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation, and with a second connection of each second inductor being connected to a stator-side connection of the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation. The use of a further generator-side pulse-controlled converter and of first and second inductors in this diesel-electric drive system allows engine braking in the case of the diesel engine, as in the case of a commercial vehicle, in the braking mode, as a result of which a portion of the power in the electrical brake is dissipated via the diesel engine. The size of the braking resistance can be correspondingly reduced, for the same power. In the generator mode, the two polyphase self-commutated pulse-controlled converters which are connected in parallel on the generator side are decoupled on the input side by these first and second inductors.
In a further advantageous embodiment of the diesel-electric drive system, the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation has two separate stator winding systems and the voltage intermediate-circuit converter has two self-commutated pulse-controlled converters on the generator side, whose connections on the AC voltage side are each linked to a stator-side connection of one of the two stator winding systems. In consequence, the stator windings of the two winding systems of the synchronous generator with permanent-magnet excitation are each connected to one generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converter of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter, which are jointly connected on the DC voltage side to an intermediate circuit of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter. On the AC voltage side, one of these two generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter is linked by means of a switching apparatus to a braking resistance. This embodiment of the diesel-electric drive system according to the invention also allows engine braking in the case of the diesel engine as in the case of commercial vehicles, so that a portion of the power in electrical brakes can be dissipated via the diesel engine. This allows the braking resistance to be correspondingly reduced in size.
Further advantageous refinements of the diesel-electric drive system are specified in dependent claims 4 to 8.
In order to explain the invention further, reference is made to the drawing, which schematically illustrates a plurality of exemplary embodiments of a diesel-electric drive system according to the invention, and in which:
In
Since this equivalent circuit is an equivalent circuit of a diesel-electric shunting locomotive, 30 denotes a traction container which accommodates the converter electronics. The braking resistance and the diesel-driven synchronous generator 4 with permanent-magnet excitation are arranged outside this traction container 30. The four three-phase asynchronous motors 8 are the motors for the two bogies of a diesel-electric shunting locomotive.
The braking resistance 20, which in this equivalent circuit is in the form of a resistor, may also be formed from series-connected resistances. The thyristor 22 which can be turned off is a converter bridge arm module in this implementation, in which only the associated free-wheeling diode is used instead of a second thyristor which can be turned off. This converter bridge arm module also includes a circuitry network for the thyristor which can be turned off, and a so-called gate unit.
The generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converter 12 of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter 6 is formed by means of converter bridge arm modules 48 in this embodiment of the diesel-electric drive system. An equivalent circuit of these converter bridge arm modules 48 is illustrated in more detail in
According to this equivalent circuit in
The connections R, S and T, as well as R′, S′ and T′, respectively, on the AC voltage side of the two generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters are respectively linked to an inductor 66 or 68. The inductors 68 are used to link the connections R′, S′ and T′ on the AC voltage side of one self-commutated pulse-controlled converter by means of the circuit breaker 40 to the stator-side connections 42, 44 and 46 of the stator winding system of the synchronous generator 4 with permanent-magnet excitation. The inductors 66 are used to link the connections R, S and T on the AC voltage side of the other self-commutated pulse-controlled converter on the one hand by means of the switching apparatus 32 to the braking resistances 34, 36 and 38 and on the other hand by means of a further switching apparatus 70 to the stator-side connections 42, 44 and 46 of the stator winding system of the synchronous motor 4 with permanent-magnet excitation. The use of two self-commutated pulse-controlled converters, which are linked on the DC voltage side to the same intermediate circuit 18, as generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 12 of the voltage intermediate-circuit converter 6, and the use of the associated inductors 66, 68 allows engine braking in the case of the diesel engine 2, as in the case of a commercial vehicle. In consequence, a portion of the power in the electrical brake is dissipated via the diesel engine 2. This allows the braking resistances 34, 36 and 38 to be correspondingly reduced in size.
The double-converter bridge arm module 64 shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 010 536.2 | Mar 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/50446 | 1/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2008 |