1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to the synchronization of a three-phase Alternating Current (AC) power source to a three-phase power grid. Specifically, the preferred embodiments of the present invention relate to the synchronization of the voltage phase angles of static power converters to those of a three-phase power grid.
2. Description of the Related Art
As society continues to advance technologically and economically, it becomes increasingly dependent on energy such as electrical power to drive the advancement. Indeed, the shortage of electrical power may hinder such advancement and wreak havoc on society, which relies on electricity for everyday commerce and living. The California energy crisis of 2001 highlights this reliance on electricity and demonstrates the need to provide additional electrical power generators wherever and whenever increased power consumption is detected.
As known, each geographical region in countries such as the United States is supplied with electricity from power plants via a three-phase power grid. Traditionally, large power plants were built to meet the increased demand of power consumption. However, large power plants require large transmission lines to supply electricity to regional power grids, and new plants and transmission lines require substantial financial investment. Additionally, obtaining governmental approval to site and build new power plants and transmission capacity is becoming more difficult due to complex issues ranging from environmental concerns and potential health effects of electromagnetic fields (EMF) to other special interest groups' concerns.
An alternative to large power plants is the use of small low cost power generators connected in parallel to power grids to provide added power capacity during peak power consumption periods in order to reduce the strain on power grids. For instance, a peak period may occur during the summer, when widespread air conditioning use becomes taxing on the power grids. AC power sources, such as static power converters (SPCs) drawing power from batteries, fuel cells, and the like, have been used as low cost power generators to provide added power capacity to power grids during peak periods. As with the connection of a large power plant to an existing power grid, when connecting an additional AC power source, such as a static power converter, to a three-phase power grid, synchronization of the amplitudes, frequencies, and phase angles of the existing voltage on the power grid and the output voltage of the AC power source is required. Without synchronization, the discrepancies in the amplitudes, frequencies, and/or phase angles between the two parallel voltages may cause abnormal current to circulate between the grid and the additional power source and damage both systems.
Typically, when connecting a three-phase AC power source such as a SPC with a three-phase power grid, a phase-locked loop (PLL) technique is used in the AC power source to control its phase synchronization with the grid. In abnormal operating conditions, if the grid voltage is lost for a short time, e.g., 0.1 second, and a circuit switch has a bounce action, the PLL will not function properly without its feedback inputs from the power grid. Thus, under fault conditions, when the PLL loses synchronization with the grid, abnormal current such as over current and distortion current may occur. Consequently, the AC power source will not realize reliable parallel operation with the grid. And as mentioned earlier, the abnormal current may also damage both the AC power source and the power grid.
The above background introduction shows that when connecting a three-phase AC power source such as a SPC with a three-phase power grid, there is a need to synchronize the voltage phase angle of the AC power source with the voltage phase angle of the power grid to which the AC power source supplies the voltage. With the voltage phase angles synchronized, the voltage frequencies are also synchronized.
Accordingly, in one aspect a phase angle synchronization method to connect an AC power source with a power grid is disclosed, wherein the AC power source can reliably generate a voltage phase angle for the AC power source that matches with the phase angle of the power grid in normal and abnormal operation conditions. Thus, the voltage frequency of the AC power source is also synchronized with the voltage frequency of the power grid.
In another aspect, a hybrid synchronization phase-angle generator to connect a three-phase AC power source with a three-phase power grid is disclosed, wherein the generator uses a combination of the conventional PLL and a microprocessor-based controller in the AC power source to perform phase angle synchronization.
Additional aspects and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description that follows, and in part will become more apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the disclosure.
In the drawings, identical reference numbers identify similar elements or acts. The sizes and relative positions of elements in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale. For example, the shapes of various elements and angles are not drawn to scale, and some of these elements are arbitrarily enlarged and positioned to improve drawing legibility. Further, the particular shapes of the elements, as drawn, are not intended to convey any information regarding the actual shape of the particular elements, and have been solely selected for ease of recognition in the drawings.
In the following description, certain specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments of the invention. However, one skilled in the art will understand that the invention may be practiced without these details. In other instances, well-known structures associated with power conversion, microprocessors and phase-locked loop control circuits have not been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring descriptions of the embodiments of the invention.
Unless the context requires otherwise, throughout this specification and claims which follow, the word “comprise” and variations thereof, such as, “comprises” and “comprising” are to be construed in an open, inclusive sense, that is as “including, but not limited to.”
The headings provided herein are for convenience only and do not interpret the scope or meaning of the claimed invention.
Likewise, the power grid voltages have three phases: Va_g, Vb_g, and Vc_g. Each of the grid voltages also includes a voltage magnitude component and a phase angle component. For instance, the grid phase A voltage Va_g includes a magnitude component Vm_g and a phase angle component πθ. Thus, if Vm_g≅Sin(γ) represents phase A voltage Va_g of the SPC, phase B voltage Vb_g and phase C voltage Vc_g of the grid are represented by Vm_g≅Sin(γ+120°) and Vm_g≅Sin(γ+240°), respectively.
When the AC power source 100 is operated in parallel with the power grid 190, the voltage magnitude Vm_p of the AC power source should be equal to the voltage magnitude Vm_g of the grid, and the phase angle θ (and thus the voltage frequency) of the AC power source should be equal to the phase angle γ (and the voltage frequency) of the grid. Once such synchronization is achieved, i.e., Vm_p=Vm_g and θ=γ, the circuit breakers 150 can be closed. The synchronization is kept so long as the circuit breakers are closed to prevent abnormal current conditions and possible damage to the AC power source 100 and/or the power grid 190. The present invention provides a reliable system and method to achieve phase angle synchronization between the AC power source 100 and the power grid 190, which is achieved when θ=γ.
The PLL controller 210 receives as inputs the grid phase voltages Va_g, Vb_g, and Vc_g in order to determine and lock-on to the grid phase angle γ. The principle of the PLL controller 210 of the present invention is shown in
This transformation is based on a set of synchronous transformation axes illustrated in FIG. 4. With reference to
wherein Kp is the proportional gain and Ki is the integral time. The output of the PI regulator module 212 is the angular frequency ωgrd of the grid voltages. The cyclical or ordinary frequency fgrd of the grid voltages can be computed from the angular frequency ωgrd, by the frequency converter module 214, according to:
The grid phase angle γ can be derived from the grid angular frequency ωgrd by the integrator module 213 via integration of the Laplace transform:
Thus, the PLL controller 210 provides two outputs, the phase angle γ and frequency fgrd of the grid three-phase voltages, as shown in
If γk represents the angle γ at time step k, and γk−1 represents the angle γ at time step k−1 for the digital controller 250, θ0 is generated by the following algorithm:
At time step k, if γk changes its sign from positive to negative,
The fault grid angle detector module 252 is used to detect the abnormal operation of the grid voltage phase angle. When an abnormal angle change is detected, the output ER1 of the detector module 252 will change its logic level from “0” to “1” and open the switch SW1. As a result, the angle value “0” will be sent to module 255 as mentioned above. The following algorithm is implemented by the fault grid angle detector module 252 to detect the abnormal operation of the grid phase angle:
The output grid voltage frequency fgrd of the PLL controller 210 is used as an input to the step angle Δθ generator module 253 to generate the increment angle Δθ for input to the synchronization angle θ generation module 255. The Δθ generator module generates Δθ according to the following equation:
Δθ=2π·(tupd/Tc
Under normal operating conditions, the value of the increment angle Δθ is upgraded with the frequency fgrd. When an abnormal operating condition occurs, the increment angle Δθ generated by the step angle Δθ generator module 253 will not be sent to the synchronization angle θ generation module 255. Thus, Δθ in the synchronization angle θ generation module 255 keeps its previous value and will not be updated.
The fault grid frequency detector module 254 is used to detect the abnormal condition of the grid voltage frequency fgrd. When abnormal frequency condition is detected, the output ER2 of block 254 will change its logic level from “0” to “1” and open the switch SW2. The angle Δθ generated by the step angle Δθ generator module 253 will not be sent to the synchronization angle θ generation module 255, which will then keep the previous value of Δθ, as mentioned earlier. Fault grid frequency detector module 254 implements the following algorithm to detect the abnormal operation of the grid frequency:
As mentioned earlier, both the initial angle θ0 and the increment angle Δθ are inputs to the synchronization angle θ generation module 255 to generate the phase angle θk at step k for the AC power source 100 (
θk=θ0+θk−1+Δθ,
−π≦θk≦π,
wherein θk is of course the desired phase angle of the output voltage of the AC power source 100 at time step k. As mentioned earlier, because AC voltage has sinusoidal waveform, angle θk has 2π as its cycle and repeats its values within −π and π in the above equation. θk−1 is the phase angle at time step k−1. θ0 is the initial angle at the initiation in each cycle (−π and π) that is generated by the initial angle θ0 generator module 251 and used for phase angle synchronization. Δθ is the angle increment for the time step tupd that is generated by step angle Δθ generator module 253. The value θk can be used to electronically set the phase angle of the output voltages of the AC power source 100, such as an SPC, at time step k in a manner understood in the art. The desired voltage phase angle of the AC power source 100 is digitally quantized with a sampling time period tupd for each time step k. In other words, the digital controller 250 updates the phase angle in every time step tupd. The time step tupd is much smaller than the cycle time (20,000/16,666 μs) of normal 50/60 Hz voltages of the power grid 190 and AC power source 100. According to one exemplary embodiment of the present invention, tupd is approximately 50-200 μs.
With the above-described system and method for a synchronization phase angle generator, synchronization is guaranteed between an AC power source 100, such as a SPC, and a power grid 190 in normal operation. This is because the initial angle θ0 is equal to the actual grid voltage phase angle γ at the initiation of every cycle. Voltage phase angle generation and synchronization for the AC power source 100 is also guaranteed even during abnormal operation. Furthermore, the hybrid use of a PLL controller 210 and a digital microprocessor-based controller 250 with modules 251, 252, 253, 254, and 255 for phase angle generation and synchronization eliminates the phase angle error that may be caused by the calculation and sampling delay of the digital controller. This is because the grid voltage phase angle generated from the PLL controller 210 is based on a feedback mechanism of the grid phase voltages, and the phase angle error associated with sampling delay of the digital controller 250 can be compensated by the PLL controller 210 when the phase angle is used for the PLL controller 210 to lock its phase with grid voltage phase. The phase angle generated from the PLL controller 210 is closer in value to the actual grid voltage phase angle. Furthermore, there is an integrator module 213 in the PLL controller 210, as shown in
The above description sets out a three phase synchronization phase angle generator 200, and methods for synchronizing power phase and/or frequency between a three phase AC power source 100 and a power grid 190. Although specific embodiments of, and examples for, the invention are described herein for illustrative purposes, various equivalent modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, as will be recognized by those skilled in the relevant art.
The teachings provided herein of the invention can be applied to other synchronization phase angle generators, not necessarily the three phase synchronization phase angle generator 200 generally described above. Additionally, many of the methods include optional acts or steps, and may include additional acts or steps, or perform the acts or steps in a different order, as will be recognized by those skilled in the relevant art. The synchronization phase angle generator 200 can have a different organization than the illustrated embodiment, combining some functions and/or eliminating some functions. The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments.
These and other changes can be made to the invention in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the invention to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all AC conversion systems and methods that operate in accordance with the claims. Accordingly, the invention is not limited by the disclosure, but instead its scope is to be determined entirely by the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030222507 A1 | Dec 2003 | US |