The invention relates to an inverter device, an energy storage system comprising such an inverter device, and a method of controlling such an inverter device.
As local energy sources, in particular alternative energy sources such as solar panels and wind turbines, are becoming more widespread in Europe, in the US, and in the rest of the world, the demand for effective and inexpensive technologies for connecting these local energy sources to already existing electrical networks is increasing as well. Many local energy sources, such as solar modules, and also the electrical energy storage devices provide, and in the latter case require, direct current (DC) power. On the other hand, electrical networks, in particular the external electrical grid maintained and administered by an external power provider, work with alternative current (AC) power. In order to convert between DC power and AC power, use is made of power inverters, in the following also just called inverters.
In addition to converting between DC and AC power, modern inverters fulfill a range of other functions. They are able to automatically adjust the output voltage and synchronize with the electrical grid. It is furthermore possible to program them for controlled input and output depending on various electrical and environmental parameters detected through appropriate sensors. Most inverters have to utilize a transformer in one form or the other for creating the appropriate output voltage. This applies especially in cases where a specific inverter technology developed for the European market, where power grids are generally based on the three-phase electric power standard, is modified and adapted for the US market, where power grids are generally based on a split-phase electric power standard. The modification to the inverter then involves utilizing a transformer for converting the three-phase grid connection of the inverter to split-phase standard.
However, the use of transformers makes power inverters heavy and expensive. Transformers can also be an additional source of loss, which can lower the efficiency of an inverter. An example for a transformer-less, unidirectional power inverter is disclosed in US 2011/0299312 A1. This known inverter is a 3-level neutral point clamped (NPC) inverter designed for connecting a solar cell array to a power grid. The DC output of the solar cell array is converted to an AC voltage using pulse width modulation.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide devices and methods for converting between DC power and AC power, which are diversely and flexibly applicable, in particular for use with batteries. They should further be cost effective and have low electrical loss.
In order to achieve the above-mentioned objective, according to one aspect of the invention, an inverter device is provided. The inverter device can be electrically connected between a battery and a power grid, thus leading to an energy storage system according to a further aspect of the invention.
The inverter device comprises an inverter circuit, which has switching elements arranged in a multilevel clamped topology. These switching elements are controlled by a control unit, which is also part of the inverter device. The control unit is configured to control said switching elements such that during a discharging period, DC power from said battery is transformed into AC power and supplied to said power grid. Furthermore, the configuration of the control circuit is such that during a charging period, AC power from said power grid is transformed into DC power and supplied to said battery.
In order to accomplish this operation, according to a third aspect of the invention, a method of controlling an inverter device, which is electrically connected between a battery and a power grid and which comprises an inverter circuit having switching elements arranged in a multilevel clamped topology is provided. By performing said method, said switching elements are controlled such that, during a discharging period, DC power from said battery is transformed into AC power and supplied to said power grid, and, during a charging period, AC power from said power grid is transformed into DC power and supplied to said battery. In an advantageous embodiments said inverter device is configured to support both a battery and a solar module.
By allowing for both a charging and a discharging period, it is assured that the inverter device can function bi-directionally. In other words, it can convert between DC power and AC power in both directions, which is necessary for utilizing a battery as an electric storage device. The inverter can still also be utilized as a solar power inverter, giving it more flexibility and a broader range of application. For said solar power inverter, the selection of string MPPT (Maximum Power Point Tracking) trackers and optimizers results in having a wide voltage range of operation to entertain a wider number of panels in an array configuration and to be able to handle input voltage fluctuations due to temperature and levels of irradiation.
Said inverter device has a transformer-less design. This means in particular, that the DC side terminal of the inverter device is not galvanically isolated from its AC side terminal.
Said inverter circuit is configured as a split-phase inverter. In particular, the split-phase inverter may be configured to generate two phases, and said control unit may be configured to control said switching elements such that said two phases are separated by substantially 180°. A split-phase voltage output allows the use of the inverter for feeding AC power into power grids which are not utilizing three-phase systems, such as for example power grids in the US.
Advantageously, the battery is a deep-cycle battery. In an advantageous embodiment, said battery has a relatively high cycle-count. Advantageously, the battery is a lithium iron phosphate battery.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said switching elements of said inverter circuit are arranged in a neutral point clamped (NPC) topology or in a modified neutral point clamped (MNPC) topology. The MNPC topology is often also referred to as an NPC2 topology. The NPC and MNPC topologies are described in detail in “Partial 5/3 Level Topology for Solar Grid-tie Inverters”, A. Ginart et al., published in Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE), 2014 IEEE. September 2014, pages 5736-5742, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Said switching elements of said inverter circuit advantageously comprise solid state switches, such as transistors, in particular insulated-gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs). Said switching elements may be controlled, i.e. switched on and off, by the control unit independently or in groups. Each switching element is advantageously connected to a freewheeling or flyback diode and/or is diode clamped. In particular, the freewheeling diode may have a similar power rating as the switch it is connected to. In an advantageous embodiment, two or more switches are placed together in one die, i.e. they are packages together into a single electronic component, possibly together with their respective freewheeling or clamping diode. This has the advantage of reducing parasitic inductances.
The freewheeling or clamping diodes may be produced using a different technology or using different base materials than the switching elements, e.g. transistors, themselves. For example, the diodes may be made of silicon carbide, while the transistors are silicon-based.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said control unit comprises a pulse width modulation (PWM) control unit. Said PWM control unit produces PWM signals, which are used to control the switching elements. During the discharging period, the inverter circuit thus produces a multilevel output voltage, which after filtering is sinusoidal and can be fed as an AC power to the power grid.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said inverter device further comprises a direct current to direct current (DC-DC) bidirectional voltage converter connected to said inverter circuit and connectable to said battery, said bidirectional voltage converter being conductively linked. In the sense of the present invention, the formulation “conductively linked” means that DC-DC bidirectional converter is non-isolated, i.e., not separated galvanically from the other components and/or circuits of the inverter device. In particular, the DC-DC bidirectional converter may be conductively linked to the inverter circuit and/or a DC link. This might exclude the control unit, which itself might in an advantageous embodiment be galvanically separated from the other circuit components of the inverter device.
Advantageously, said bidirectional voltage converter comprising further switching elements controlled by said control unit. Said DC-DC converter can be designed and/or controlled by the control unit to function as a bidirectional voltage converter. In particular, said DC-DC converter can be designed and/or controlled by the control unit to operate as a boost or as a buck. The DC-DC converter can comprise one or multiple legs. In the latter case, it can have an interleaving configuration. In particular, a DC-DC converter comprising two legs may have a 180° interleaving configuration, a DC-DC converter comprising three legs may have a 120° interleaving configuration, and a DC-DC converter comprising four legs may have a 90° interleaving configuration.
Advantageously, the inverter device further comprises a DC link. Advantageously, said DC link is adapted to remain an effective source of power at an adequate voltage capable of allowing a DC-AC bidirectional bridge to dispense or receive power from the power grid. Advantageously, said DC link is adapted to operate at a voltage level dependent on voltage of the power grid. Said voltage of said DC link is configured to be able to operate in the range of said voltage of said power grid. Advantageously, said voltage level of said DC link is 1.5 times to 12.5 times higher than a voltage level of said power grid. The closer said voltage of said DC link matches the voltage needed to interact with said power grid, the more efficient the inverter device operates.
Preferably, the DC link is adapted to operate at a voltage level which is at least twice, 3 times, 5 times, or 7 times higher than a voltage level of said battery. Advantageously, said voltage level of said DC link is set to at least 300V, 500V, 800V or 1200 Volt,
Advantageously, said voltage level of said DC link is set to between 300V and 1700V, between 300V and 500V, between 500V and 700V, between 800V and 1200V, or between 200V and 1700V. It may in particular be set to 400V, 600V, 1000V, or 1500 Volt. These voltage values are especially advantageous for said solar power inverter. Advantageously, said voltage of said power grid is 120V, 240V, 480 VAC 3PH. The preference for a higher voltage of said DC link also helps keep the currents low and maintain a high power-handling capacity by the inverter device. By doing so, costs are low.
When the DC DC converter is designed and/or controlled by the control unit to operate as a boost or as a buck, the DC-DC converter has dual purpose: The DC-DC converter can operate as a battery charger in the form of a buck converter, thus translating the power available in said DC link to a lower voltage acceptable to the batteries. But, said DC-DC converter can also work as a DC boost converter, thus allowing power available in said battery to be transported to said DC link.
Advantageously, an operational voltage level on said battery is below 100V, below 80V or below 60V. This allows for safer handling of said battery and less redundant measures to maintain proper clearances for dielectric separation. Further, this allows for said battery to have a longer service life and retain its storage capacity longer and operate more reliably over the life of the inverter device.
Advantageously, the DC terminal of said inverter device, in particular the input terminal of said DC-DC voltage converter, which connects to said battery, comprises an inductance. The inductance is a (magnetic) energy conversion storage that allows energy transfer from and to the battery. Said inductance acts as a bidirectional regulator.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said inverter device comprises a DC-DC unidirectional voltage converter connected to said inverter circuit and connectable to a solar panel. Said DC-DC converter can be designed and/or controlled by the control unit to operate as a unidirectional voltage converter. By replacing the DC-DC bidirectional voltage converter of the embodiment described above with a DC-DC unidirectional voltage converter, the remainder of the inverter device may be utilized for supporting a battery and a solar panel at its DC terminal.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said control unit and said inverter circuit are arranged in a feedback loop. In particular, said switching elements may be controlled depending on one or more instantaneous values of the following electrical parameters: voltage at an input terminal of said inverter circuit, voltage at a point inside said inverter circuit, voltage at an output terminal of said inverter circuit, current at an input terminal of said inverter circuit, current at a point inside said inverter circuit, current at an output terminal of said inverter circuit. Two or more of said instantaneous values may be combined by mathematical operators in order to obtain operational results, which are used as input to a module of said control unit in order to produce a feedback control parameter to control said switching elements. Said instantaneous value may be detected using in particular current and voltage measuring means.
According to an advantageous embodiment, said control unit is a direct power control control unit. In particular, the control unit is a bidirectional direct power control pulse width modulation control unit. In particular, according to an advantageous embodiment, said control unit is configured to control said switching elements such that the current extracted from said battery during said discharging period or the current supplied to said battery during said charging period has a quadratic sinusoidal form.
The underlying theory behind the direct power control is that for a single phase system the power transferred between the DC terminal of the inverter device, which is connected to the battery, and the AC terminal of the inverter device, which is connected to the power grid, follows the quadratic shape of a sinusoidal wave. This is due to the nature of the sinusoidal form of the currents and voltages in the power grid. Thus, in order to minimize an accumulation of transitory energy during the charging and discharging period, the power extracted from or provided to the battery needs to follow the same natural patterns of the power grid. In three-phase balanced systems, this procedure is not required, because the transferred power is practically constant, requiring similar conditions from the battery storage system. In three-phase balanced systems, the control is usually based on a direct-quadrature-zero or d,q transformation which simplifies the control by taking advantage of this practically constant power.
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the method, a current having a quadratic sinusoidal form is delivered to said battery during said discharging period and/or a current having a quadratic sinusoidal form is extracted from said battery during said charging period.
Advantageously, a voltage level of a DC link is operated at a level which is 1.5 times to 12.5 times higher than a voltage level of said power grid.
Advantageously, the inverter device is operated at a frequency between 10 kHz and 100 kHz, advantageously between 15 kHz and 80 kHz, between 20 kHz and 40 kHz, or between 80 kHz and 100 kHz. Thus, adequate levels of efficiency for the inverter device are achieved.
The inverter device advantageously comprises one or more of the following functional blocks of circuits or circuit elements: A DC-DC voltage converter connectable or connected to the battery directly or through a filter, an inverter circuit, in particular a split-phase inverter circuit connectable or connected to the power grid directly or through a filter, a DC link linking said DC-DC voltage converter and said inverter circuit and comprising capacitive elements, and a bidirectional control controlling switching elements, which are built into said inverter circuit and into said DC-DC voltage converter.
It should be noted that the battery itself may comprise multiple individual batteries connected in series. Instead of a battery, one may therefore speak of an electric storage device, consisting of one or more batteries.
The present invention will be explained in more detail in the following text with reference to preferred embodiments of an energy supply system according to the invention, which are illustrated in
Elements and functional blocks having similar functions in the different embodiments are references with the same number, even though their setup and/or effect may wary across different embodiments.
The first functional block, a DC-DC voltage converter 2, is connected directly to said energy storage 1. The connection from said energy storage 1 to said DC-DC voltage converter 2 leads over inductances L21, L22, the role of which will be explained further down in connection with
The second functional block, a DC link 3, is connected to the DC-DC voltage converter 2, opposite to the energy storage 1. It comprises a capacitor bank with two capacitors C31, C32 connected in series between the terminals of the DC-DC voltage converter 2. A common ground of the DC-DC voltage converter 2 and the energy storage 1 is connected also to the central connection point of the two capacitors C31, C32. The DC link 3 is adapted to operate at a voltage level which is at considerably or even multiple times higher than the voltage level at said battery.
The third functional block is an inverter circuit 4, which is connected between the DC link 3 and the power grid 6. The inverter circuit 4 comprises a low pass filter, through which it is connected to the power grid 6. Here, the low pass filter is shown inside the dashed box indicating the inverter circuit 4. However, the low pass filter may alternatively be seen as a separate functional block of the inverter device, having a function distinct from the other functional blocks. The inverter circuit 4 has a split-phase configuration comprising two legs. One of the legs comprises the switching elements S41, S42, T41, T42 in an MNPC three-level inverter topology and leads into the low pass filter composed of the inductor L41 and the capacitor C41. The other of the legs comprises switching elements S43, S44, T43, T44 in an MNPC three-level inverter topology and leading into the low pass filter composed of the inductor L42 and the capacitor C42.
Each of the switching elements is a transistor, in particular an IGBT. Each of the switches S41, S42, S43, S44, which are responsible for providing the +V and the −V voltage levels, is connected to a corresponding freewheeling diode. In contrast, the switches T41, T42, T43, T44, which are responsible for the zero voltage level, are diode clamped.
A bidirectional control unit 5 is only shown schematically in
The DC-DC voltage converter 2 of the inverter device shown in
As indicated in
As mentioned above, the underlying theory behind the direct power control is that the power transferred between the DC terminal and the AC terminal of the inverter device follows the shape of a quadratic sinusoidal wave, i.e. sinus squared. In the following, the power relation between a battery system and a single phase AC system are described mathematically.
The DC current can be computed based on energy conservation as follows:
P
DC
=I
DC
·V
DC
=ηI
RMS
·V
RMS
=P
AC
Here, PDC, IDC, and VDC are the power, current and voltage on the DC side, i.e. of the battery, while IRMS and VRMS are the desired root mean square values of the current and the voltage, and PDC is the power on the DC side, i.e. on the power grid.
Assuming that the efficiency and power factor equal to one, the instantaneous, i.e. time dependent, values of the current and voltages can be computed as follows:
V
DC
I
DC
=V
RMS√{square root over (2)} sin(ωt)IRMS√{square root over (2)} sin(ωt)=2VRMSIRMS sin2(ωt)
Here, ω is the frequency of the DC current and voltage and t is the time. As a result, the DC current of the battery should have a quadratic sinewave form shown in the following equation:
As a result, the DC current of the battery should have a quadratic sine form shown in the following equation:
Advantageously, the inverter device is operated at a frequency of several 10's of kHz.
In the direct power control for a single phase system, the power transferred follows a quadratic shape of a sinusoidal wave. This is due to the nature of the sinusoidal form of the currents and voltages of the power grid. In the inverter device of the present invention, the energy accumulated in the DC link compensates the voltage of the battery, which remains practically constant compared to the other parameters.
Based on the above equations, the main equations that control the process are:
For a split-phase configuration, this leads to:
Here, V*Battery is the compensated value of the battery voltage VBattery, K1 is a factor that depends on the efficiency of the process and the relation between of the DC battery voltage and the AC voltage, K2 is a factor that depends on the size of the capacitors of the DC link, in particular on the energy accumulated in them and the relation between the battery voltage and the DC link voltage, and VAC1 and VAC2 denote the voltages of phase A and phase B, respectively.
A schematic diagram of a control unit for achieving said direct power control on the basis of the above calculation is shown in
The control unit is shown below in the lower half of
At the power grid connection of the low pass filter, an instantaneous AC voltage V(t)AC is measured and multiplied with said AC reference value I(t)AC Ref in a multiplication operator 52 to obtain an instantaneous AC power value P(t)AC, which is delivered to or extracted from the power grid. On the other hand, the battery voltage VBattery and a DC link voltage VDClink are measured instantaneously and provided to a zero energy accumulated DC link controller 56. Said DC link controller 56 ensures that the instantaneous DC power taken from or delivered to the battery is the same as the AC power taken from or delivered to the power grid. In order to achieve this goal, the DC link controller 56 ensures that the value of the battery voltage and the DC link voltage remain constant.
The DC link controller 56 produces a value which is divided by the instantaneous AC power value P(t)AC in order to obtain a battery DC current reference Ibatt_ref, which equals the instantaneous DC current to be delivered to or extracted from the battery. Furthermore, an instantaneous battery current IBattery is measured and subtracted from said DC current reference Ibatt_ref in a subtraction module 58. The result is passed through another PI controller 59 and fed to another pulse-width modulator 60, which produces control signals for the switches of the DC-DC voltage converter 2.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/855,509, filed Sep. 16, 2015, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 14855509 | Sep 2015 | US |
Child | 16253664 | US |