The present invention relates to electrical power conversion, and more particularly to a controller for a power converter, such as an inverter of a synchronous AC motor drive system.
A synchronous AC motor typically utilizes rotor position sensors to provide information regarding the position of the motor's rotor with respect to the motor's stator windings. Such positional information allows for proper conversion of power that is supplied to the stator windings. Rotor position sensors such as Hall effected devices are typically mounted in the stator, proximate the stator winding, to provide intelligence regarding rotor position. Such rotor position sensors, however, can be unreliable due to mechanism alignment problems and temperature incompatibility problems between the stator windings and electronic components such as the Hall effect devices. Moreover, the rotor position sensors can be difficult to mount to the motor during motor assembly, especially for multi-pole motors. In multi-pole motors, the electrical misalignment angle is equivalent to the angular mechanical misalignment angle multiplied by the number of pole pairs.
Due these and other drawbacks, sensorless techniques have been developed to determine rotor position. One sensorless rotor position detection technique observes back EMF voltages at the stator windings. Another technique, which applies a floating frame control (FFC) scheme, has been described by Huggett et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 6,301,136, which in hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In the FFC scheme, motor phase-current is detected directly and used to estimate rotor speed/position, and also to control the reactive current to zero. More specifically, sensorless rotor speed/position detection is combined with current control to achieve a closed-loop equilibrium condition in which an inverter voltage vector (Vωt) finds a position that results in a zero direct-axis current component value. Under this condition, a reference frame (floating frame) is synchronized with the magnetic axis of the rotor and can be used to control power conversion.
Such control results in unity power factor during steady state operation, which is an advantage for high power inverter design. Although the FFC scheme disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,301,136 is effective in many applications and conditions, the speed/position estimation in the FCC scheme is embedded in the direct-axis current regulator, which makes the loop tuning sensitive in some applications.
The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for controlling a power converter of a synchronous machine system, without the use of dedicated rotor position sensors. In one aspect, the present invention is a power converter control method comprising: sampling phase-current values between the power converter and the synchronous machine; selecting a floating reference frame; regulating a current vector to align with the reference frame, the reference frame having a direct-axis component and a quadrature-axis component; estimating rotor speed and position as a function of instantaneous power; adjusting the selected reference frame, based on estimated rotor position, to synchronize the selected reference frame with the magnetic axis of the rotor, thereby generating a synchronized floating frame; and applying the synchronized floating frame to control the power converter.
In another aspect, the present invention is a power converter controlling apparatus for controlling a power converter of a synchronous machine system, the controlling apparatus comprising a current controller for generating power converter command signals by: sampling phase-current values between the power converter and the synchronous machine; selecting a reference frame; regulating a current vector to align with the reference frame, the reference frame having a direct-axis component and a quadrature-axis component; adjusting the selected reference frame, based on estimated rotor position, to synchronize the selected reference frame with the magnetic axis of the rotor, thereby generating a synchronized floating frame; and applying the synchronized floating frame to control the power converter. The controlling apparatus further comprises a rotor position estimator for generating the estimated rotor position as a function of instantaneous power.
Embodiments of the present invention are more specifically set forth in the following description, with reference to the appended drawings. In the following description and accompanying drawings like elements are denoted with similar reference numbers. Further, well-known elements and related explanations are omitted so as not to obscure the inventive concepts presented herein.
In accordance with aspects of the present invention, a FFC-based control apparatus measures multi-phase line current, calculates a reference frame that synchronizes with rotor position/speed based on vector control and sensorless rotor position/speed estimation. In accordance with an implementation of the present invention, instantaneous power, including imaginary power (O) and real power (P), is calculated to determine rotor position/speed. The synchronized reference frame is used to control a power converter. The instantaneous power floating frame controller can drive a synchronous machine without the use of rotor position sensors.
The speed/position estimating unit 130 includes an instantaneous power calculation unit 132; a power factor angle calculator unit 134 for calculating the power factor angle; a speed estimating PI controller 136 for calculating estimated speed ωest based on the power factor angle; and an integrator 138 for calculating position θest based on estimated speed ωest.
Both estimated speed ωest and position θest are fed into the current controller 110, which performs vector control to generate voltage commands Va, Vb, Vc. Operation of the current controller 110 and the speed/position estimating unit 130 will next be described with reference to the flow diagram of
Initially, multi-phase line current values Ia, Ib, and Ic are obtained (step S302) and fed into the Clarke transform unit 122, which calculates stationary reference frame values Iα, Iβ (step S304) by calculating:
Next, the Park transform unit 124 calculates rotating reference frame values Id and Iq (step S306) by calculating:
Id=Iαcos θest+Iβsin θest
Iq=−Iαsin θest+Iβcos θest
The stationary reference frame α, β and the selected rotating reference frame qest and dest can be seen in the vector diagrams 5A–5C. The difference between Id and a reference value (e.g., 0) is input to the reactive current PI controller 116 to generate a voltage reference Vd to minimize such an error (i.e., closed-loop control). As is known in the art, vector control for controlling the reactive current Id to zero aligns the current vector Iωt with the floating reference frame, as illustrated for example in
Vα=Vd cos θest−Vq sin θest
Vβ=Vd sin θest+Vq cos θest
The inverse Clarke transform unit 120 performs an inverse Clarke transform to generate command voltages Va, Vb, and Vc.
The instantaneous power calculator 132 of the speed/position estimating unit 130 calculates imaginary power (Q) and real power (P) by calculating:
P=VqIq+VdId
Q=VqId−VdIq
The power factor angle calculator 134 calculates the power factor angle by calculating:
θ=Arctg(Q/P)
As seen for example in
where: KPLL, TPLL are the gain and time constant of the speed estimator PI that has transfer function as
As illustrated in
As described above, an embodiment of the present invention applies a sensorless technique for determining rotor speed and position based on instantaneous power in a FFC scheme. As illustrated for example in
This application claims priority under 35 USC §119(e) of Provisional Application No. 60/557,710 filed Mar. 31, 2004, the entire contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60557710 | Mar 2004 | US |