The invention relates to a diesel-electric drive system according to the preamble of claim 1, and to a method for stationary load testing of a diesel engine of the diesel-electric drive system.
A diesel-electric drive system of this generic type is known from DE 10 2007 003 172 A1 and is illustrated in more detail in the form of an equivalent circuit in
According to the equivalent circuit of the double-converter bridge arm module 32 shown in
In the case of diesel-electric traction drives, for example diesel locomotives or mining trucks, the generator 4 which is fitted to this diesel engine 2 is used to supply energy for the drive motors 8. The electrical voltage of the generator 4 is changed by the generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 to a predetermined DC-link voltage, from which the load-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 14 and 16 supply the drive motors 8. During electrical braking, the power flow in the DC-link converter 6 is precisely reversed. The energy is supplied into the DC-link circuit 20 of the converter 6 through the load-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 14 and 16. Since the diesel engine 2 cannot absorb braking energy, the braking energy must be converted to heat by means of the braking resistors 30. For continuous power distribution, a voltage which is pulse-width-modulated by the two self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 is passed to the braking resistors 30.
In order to make it possible to check the performance of the diesel engine 2, for example after repair, a so-called self-load test is carried out (stationary load test on an internal combustion engine). In the case of mining trucks and Eastern-European and North American diesel locomotives, this self-load test is already standard. In the case of diesel-electric drive systems which have a synchronous generator with an electrically produced field and a downstream diode rectifier, this self-load test is carried out when the vehicle is stationary via the braking resistors, which are fed from the DC-link circuit by means of a converter, in particular a chopper. Since the performance of the electrical brakes in these vehicles in general corresponds at least to the diesel engine power when driving, a stationary load test such as this cannot be carried out without an additional device.
A diesel-electric drive system of this generic type does not allow a self-load test to be carried out up to the maximum diesel engine power without more powerful semiconductor switches, since a self-load test:
This leads to overloading of the power electronics in the diesel-electric drive system when the current fundamental amplitude has the current harmonics superimposed on it at specific switching times.
In order nevertheless to allow a self-load test to be carried, out on this diesel-electric drive system of this generic type, it would be necessary to install an additional braking chopper in the DC-link circuit of the DC-link converter, which braking chopper would have to be designed for 50% of the total braking power. This additional braking chopper would not only cause additional costs but would also increase the weight of the traction converter. Furthermore, sufficient space to allow the additional converter to be accommodated would have to be provided on a diesel-electric locomotive or a mining truck.
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 braking chopper in order to carry out a self-load test.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the characterizing features of claim 1 in conjunction with the features of its preamble.
Since each braking resistor is split into two resistors which are electrically connected in series, and each junction point between two resistors which are electrically connected in series is linked to an input of a two-pole switching apparatus with a star-point form, the two polyphase systems comprising the generator-stator winding-pulse-controlled converter are decoupled, and each system has an associated polyphase resistor with half the resistance value of the braking resistor. In these decoupled diesel-electric drive systems, the natural braking characteristic of the generator, in particular of the permanent-magnet synchronous generator, can now be used in the self-load test, the characteristic of which depends, however, on the rotation speed and the value of the three-phase resistance, in addition to the machine parameters themselves.
This characteristic can be influenced by closed-loop reactive-current control. In the simplest case, capacitors would be connected in parallel with the resistors, thus making it possible to produce a capacitive reactive current. However, this would lead to an increase in the braking torque over the rotation speed. In addition to further additional components (capacitors) which would not be required for driving and braking operation of the vehicle, this arrangement would be unregulated.
According to the invention, this decoupled diesel-electric drive system is operated with the features of claim 5. According to this claim, the series connection of two resistors is in each case broken and the resistors in each subsystem are electrically connected in star, the two generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters are clocked synchronously, and are each operated in the phase-shifter mode. This results in a regulated reactive current in each case being generated from the charged DC-link circuit in the DC-link converter. A braking torque can be set at each rotation-speed point by closed-loop control of the reactive current, thus following a required torque curve of the diesel engine during the self-load test.
The inventive step is to use a simple and low-cost two-pole switching apparatus with a star-point former in conjunction with closed-loop reactive-current control with the existing generator-side, self-commutated pulse-controlled converters. This development according to the invention of the known diesel-electric drive system allows a self-load test with a regulated load torque to be carried out on this drive system, in which the abovementioned disadvantages no longer occur.
In order to explain the invention further, reference is made to the drawing, which schematically illustrates one embodiment of the diesel-electric drive system according to the invention, and in which:
The embodiment of a diesel-electric drive system according to the invention as shown in
This circuit which is now created (
As already mentioned, the characteristic can be influenced by closed-loop reactive current control. In the simplest case, the capacitors would have to be connected electrically in parallel with the resistors 48 and 50. These capacitors would increase the braking torque over the rotation speed n. A corresponding braking torque characteristic C is shown, plotted against the rotation speed n, in the graph in
Instead of using non-variable capacitors for producing reactive current, according to the invention, the two generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 in the DC-link converter 6 in the diesel-electric drive system are used in the phase-shifter mode. The use of these self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 in the phase-shifter mode results in a reactive current that is provided being produced from the charged DC-link capacitor 18 in the DC-link converter 6. A braking torque can be set at each rotation speed point by closed-loop control of this reactive current, thus following a required torque curve of the diesel engine 2 in the diesel-electric drive system, during the self-load test.
In the phase-shifter mode, the clocked pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 also feed current harmonics to the braking resistors 48 and 50, because of voltage harmonics. This real power, which has to be taken from the DC-link circuit 20 of the DC-link converter 6 in this diesel-electric drive system, must be taken into account in the overall budget of the drive system, in order to allow closed-loop control of the power dissipated in the braking resistors 48 and 50. However, the current harmonics are sufficiently small that they do not lead to overloading of the power semiconductors in the two self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12. During the self-load test, auxiliary modes can be supplied with power from the DC-link circuit 20, in order to allow fans and/or a cooling system to be operated.
The power of the permanent-magnet synchronous generator 4 must therefore be equal to the sum of the power loss in the resistors 48 and 50 and the power of the auxiliary modes. The power loss in the resistors 48 and 50 is governed only by the root mean square value of the clocked voltage of the self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12. The power of the permanent-magnet synchronous generator 4 is governed by the angle of the fundamental of this clocked voltage with respect to the rotor voltage of the permanent-magnet synchronous generator 4. In the graph shown in
The use of a simple and low-cost switching apparatus 54 in conjunction with the splitting of each braking resistor 30 into two resistors 48 and 50, which are electrically connected in series, and the use of the existing generator-side self-commutated pulse-controlled converters 10 and 12 in the DC-link converter 6 in a diesel-electric drive system for closed-loop reactive-current control allows a self-load test on this drive system with closed-loop load torque control, in which the power semiconductors in the two self-commutated pulse-control converters 10 and 12 in the DC-link converter 6 in this drive system are not overloaded.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 023 332.3 | May 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/53657 | 3/27/2009 | WO | 00 | 11/12/2010 |