This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to European Patent Application No. 11187366.7 filed in Europe on Nov. 1, 2011, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present disclosure relates to phase-locked loops. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to discrete phase-locked loops used for detection of angular frequency and a fundamental wave component of a reference signal.
Many applications involve the detection of fundamental angular frequency and extraction of a clean balanced three-phase sinusoidal signal, for example, the positive sequence of a fundamental wave component. The latter can be synchronized with a three-phase reference signal, despite the presence of severe unbalance and high harmonic distortion. In particular, detection of the fundamental angular frequency is used for the synchronization of three-phase grid connected systems such as power conditioning equipment, flexible ac transmission systems (FACTS), power line conditioners, regenerative drives, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), grid connected inverters for alternative energy sources, and other distributed generation and storage systems.
A known three-phase phase-locked loop (PLL) based on a synchronous reference frame (SRF-PLL) is perhaps the most extended technique used for frequency-insensitive positive-sequence detection. Different schemes have been proposed based on this known scheme, and most of them relay in a linearization assumption. Thus, the results can be guaranteed locally only. These schemes have an acceptable performance under ideal utility conditions, that is, without harmonic distortion or unbalance. However, under more severe disturbances, the bandwidth of the SRF-PLL feedback loop must be reduced to reject and cancel out the effect of harmonics and unbalance on the output. However, the PLL bandwidth reduction is not an acceptable solution as its speed of response is considerably reduced as well.
Few digital PLL schemes have appeared in the literature so far. Most of them have been referred to as DPLL. In M. A. Perez, J. R. Espinoza, L. A. Moran, M. A. Torres, and E. A. Araya, “A robust phase-locked loop algorithm to synchronize static power converters with polluted AC systems,” IEEE Trans. on Industrial Electronics, Vol. 55(5), pp. 2185-2192, May 2008, a discrete PLL is disclosed for a single-phase synchronization application. It is a zero crossing detection method, which uses a structure similar to that of the known PLL, except that discrete filters are used, with additional advantages. One of the main characteristics is the possibility to adjust a sampling period according to a fundamental frequency, to allow integer multiple of sampling periods per fundamental period. It is, however, very sensitive to severe voltage disturbances.
In B. Y. Ren; Y. R. Zhong, X. D. Sun; X. Q. Tong, “A digital PLL con-trol method based on the FIR filter for a grid-connected single-phase power conversion system,” in Proc. IEEE International Conference on Industrial Technology ICIT08, 2008, pp. 1-6., a discrete PLL method is disclosed for the single phase synchronization problem. However, the authors use the approach of extending single phase signals to virtual three-phase signals represented in synchronous frame coordinates. The discrete part comes out of the application of two FIR filters, one to produce the x-coordinate and the other to produce the y-coordinate, i.e. its orthogonal signal. Then the rest of the scheme is very similar to the known SRF-PLL used for three-phase systems.
PLL based controllers are usually implemented digitally. Consequently, the PLL scheme has to be discretized by using approximate discretization rules in most cases. This approach may work properly for a high sampling frequency; however, it may lead to inaccuracies in cases of a relatively low sampling frequency.
An exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure provides a method of detecting a frequency of a measured three-phase voltage. The exemplary method includes measuring the three-phase voltage (ναβ), and forming a discrete model for a periodic signal, the discrete model including the three-phase voltage (ναβ) and a difference (φαβ,k) between a positive voltage component and a negative voltage component of the three-phase voltage as model variables. The exemplary method also includes forming a discrete detector based on the formed discrete model, and detecting a fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) and the difference ({circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1) between the positive voltage component and the negative voltage component of the three-phase voltage from an error ({tilde over (ν)}αβ) between the measured voltage (ναβ) and the detected fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) by using the discrete detector and a sampling time (Ts) together with a detected frequency ({circumflex over (ω)}0) of the measured voltage. The detected frequency ({circumflex over (ω)}0) of the measured voltage is detected from a detected difference ({circumflex over (φ)}αβ,k) between positive and negative voltage components of the measured voltage and from the error ({tilde over (ν)}αβ) between the measured voltage (ναβ) and the detected fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) in an adaptation mechanism.
An exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure provides an arrangement for detecting the frequency of a measured three-phase voltage. The exemplary arrangement includes means for measuring the three-phase voltage (ναβ), and a discrete model for a periodic signal, the discrete model including the three-phase voltage (ναβ) and a difference (φαβ,k) between a positive voltage component and a negative voltage component of the three- phase voltage as model variables. The exemplary arrangement also includes a discrete detector based on the formed discrete model, and means for detecting a fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) and the difference ({circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1) between the positive voltage component and the negative voltage component of the three-phase voltage from an error ({tilde over (ν)}αβ) between the measured voltage (ναβ) and the detected fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) by using the discrete detector and a sampling time (Ts) together with a detected frequency ({circumflex over (ω)}0) of the measured voltage. The detected frequency ({circumflex over (ω)}0) of the measured voltage is detected from a detected difference ({circumflex over (φ)}αβ,k) between positive and negative voltage components of the measured voltage and from the error ({tilde over (ν)}αβ) between the measured voltage (ναβ) and the detected fundamental wave component of the voltage ({circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1) in an adaptation mechanism.
Additional refinements, advantages and features of the present disclosure are described in more detail below with reference to exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings, in which:
Exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure provide a method and an arrangement for implementing the method so as to solve the above-described problem. Exemplary features of the method and arrangement are described in more detail below.
The present disclosure is of special relevance in cases where digital implementation of an overall synchronization method uses a low sampling frequency. In such a case, the method of the present disclosure provides a more accurate and faster response than the simple discretization of conventional continuous time based methods using approximate discretization rules.
The present disclosure provides a discrete PLL system, referred to as dPLL-UH, which provides detection of an angular frequency, and additionally both the positive and negative sequences of a fundamental wave component of an unbalanced and distorted three-phase signal.
Characteristics of the dPLL-UH scheme can be listed as follows:
Therefore, the dPLL-UH performs properly in cases of a relatively low sampling frequency, for reference signals showing unbalanced conditions, sags, swells, and angular frequency variations, for example. Moreover, as the method is provided with an explicit discrete harmonic compensation mechanism (dCM-UH), it is able to reduce the effects of low-harmonics distortion without compromising the speed of response, thus providing a fast and precise response.
The method of the present disclosure is able to deliver detected values for positive and negative sequences of a measured reference signal ναβ, as well as a detected value of the fundamental frequency ω0. The present scheme is a discrete PLL method referred to as dPLL-UH as it appropriately handles the operation under unbalanced and harmonic distortion. The method is of special interest in cases of a low sampling frequency, where the discretization of continuous time PLL schemes, by means of approximate discretization rules, may fail to achieve the correct detected values. The dPLL-UH includes a discrete detector for the fundamental wave component of the measured reference signal (dAQSG-UH), a generator of the positive and negative sequences (dPNSG), and a discrete detector for the fundamental frequency (dFFE-UH). To cope with the harmonic distortion present in the reference signal, an exemplary embodiment also includes a discrete harmonic compensation mechanism (dCM-UH). A schematic of the proposed dPLL-UH including all elements is depicted in
First, a model to describe a three-phase unbalanced periodic signal ναβ is formed. This model assumes that the signal ναβ is composed of a fundamental and higher order harmonics components of the fundamental frequency ω0, having harmonic indexes in the set H={1,3,5, . . . }. The model is given by
where J is a skew symmetric matrix defined by
variable ναβ,k is the k-th harmonic component, and φαβ,k is an auxiliary variable necessary for completing the model description and meaningful only in an unbalanced case. In fact, these variables can be described using symmetric components to address the unbalanced case as follows
ναβ,k=ναβ,kp+ναβ,kn, ∀k∈H
φαβ,k=ναβ,kp+ναβ,kn (3)
where ναβ,kp and ναβ,kn represent the positive and negative sequence components of ναβ,k, respectively. Thus, the auxiliary variable is the difference between the positive symmetric component and the negative symmetric component of the periodic signal in question. In particular, for the fundamental wave component we have
where 12 is the 2×2 identity matrix. Notice that the positive and negative sequences can be recuperated out of (4).
Exact discretization of the k-th harmonic component model (1) using the state space transformation method based on the exponential matrix yields
where Ts represents the sampling time, xl is the l-th sample of variable x, and matrix eA(kω
At this point, it is important to distinguish between l and k. Notice that l is used to address the l-th sample in the discrete representation, while k is used to address the k-th harmonic component.
Model (5) can also be written, using the skew-symmetric matrix J, as follows
ναβ,k,l+1=cos(kω0Ts)ναβ,k,l+J sin(kω0Ts)φαβ,k,l
φαβ,k,l+1=J sin(kω0Ts)ναβ,k,l+cos(kω0Ts)φαβ,k,l, (7)
wherefrom the l-th sample of signal ναβ can be reconstructed as
Similar to (3), we can describe the discrete variables ναβ,k,l and φαβ,k,l in terms of their symmetric components as follows
ναβ,k,l=ναβ,k,lp+ναβ,k,ln, ∀k∈H
φαβ,k,l=ναβ,k,lp−ναβ,k,ln. (9)
Notice that positive and negative sequences can be recuperated out of (9).
It is to be noted that in a balanced case ναβ,k,ln=0, ναβ,k,l=φαβ,k,l, ∀k∈H. Therefore, in the balanced case the discrete model (7) can be reduced to
ναβ,k,l+1=cos(kω0Ts)ναβ,k,l+J sin(kω0Ts)ναβ,k,l. (10)
Discrete Detector of the Fundamental Wave Component—dAQSG-UH
Based on model (7) to (8), the following discrete detector is constructed for the k-th (k ∈ H) harmonic component of the reference signal ναβ,l which includes a copy of the system model (7) to which a damping term is added, that is,
where γk (k ∈ H) are positive design parameters used to introduce the required damping; {circumflex over (ω)}0,l is the detected value of the l-th sample of the fundamental frequency ω0,l; {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,k,l and {circumflex over (φ)}αβ,k,l are the detected values of ναβ,k,l and φαβ,k,l, respectively; we have now defined the error {tilde over (ν)}αβ,l=ναβ,l−{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l, with {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l representing the overall detected signal. In fact, the detected signal {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l can be decomposed as follows
{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l={circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,h,l (12)
where {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l represents the detected value of the fundamental wave component ναβ,1,l and {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,h,l represents a detected value of the harmonic distortion of the measured signal, i.e. the sum of all higher order harmonics.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment, the fundamental wave component {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l can be reconstructed, based on (11), according to
{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+1=cos({circumflex over (ω)}0Ts){circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+J sin({circumflex over (ω)}0T){circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1,l+Tγ1{tilde over (ν)}αβ,l
{circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1,l+1=J sin({circumflex over (ω)}0T){circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+cos({circumflex over (ω)}0T){circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1,l. (13)
The fundamental wave components {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l and {circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1,l, obtained from this discrete detector are vectors, each formed by two signals in quadrature. Therefore, detector (13) is referred to as the discrete detector of the fundamental wave component for unbalanced operation conditions and harmonic distortion (dAQSG-UH).
In the balanced case, the detector for the fundamental wave component can be reduced to
{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+1=cos({circumflex over (ω)}0Ts){circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+J sin({circumflex over (ω)}0Ts){circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+Tsγ1{tilde over (ν)}αβ,l
{tilde over (ν)}αβ,l=ναβ,l−{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l
{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,l={circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l+{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,h,l (14)
where {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,h,l has to be redefined for the balanced case as will be shown in (17).
Positive and Negative Sequences Generator—dPNSG-1
Based on relationship (9), the positive and negative sequences of the fundamental wave component of the reference signal can be reconstructed according to
where detected values {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l and {circumflex over (φ)}αβ,1,l are obtained as shown in the dAQSG-UH (13).
Scheme (15) is referred to as a generator of positive and negative sequences of the fundamental wave component (dPNSG-1). In accordance with an exemplary embodiment, the positive sequence component {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,lp is a pure sinusoidal balanced signal, which is in phase with the reference signal ναβ,l. This signal can now be used as a synchronization signal, to design a cleaner current reference, or as a transformation basis to represent variables in the synchronous frame.
Discrete Harmonic Compensation Mechanism—dCM-UH
This mechanism, referred to as dCM-UH, has the purpose of detecting a harmonic distortion part of the reference signal, i.e. ναβ,h,l. For harmonic rejection purposes, this signal is later subtracted from the original signal as shown in the scheme of
The design of this detector is based on (11) as shown below
where γk (k ∈ {3,5, . . . }) are positive design parameters, and J=−JT is the skew symmetric matrix defined above. That is, each harmonic component {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,k,l (k ∈ {3,5, . . . }) is detected according to (16), which are then accumulated in a single signal {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,h,l.
A block diagram of the dCM-UH given by (16) is presented in
For the balanced case, the harmonics compensation mechanism, for example, the detection of the harmonic part of the reference signal, is reduced to
The dCM-UH can be used or not, depending on the level of harmonic distortion present in the reference signal. If the dCM-UH is not used, the basic scheme, referred to as dPLL-U, still has certain robustness against harmonic distortion present in the measured reference signal owing to its selective nature. In this case, harmonic distortion rejection can be improved at the cost of limiting the bandwidth of the overall scheme, which reduces the speed of response and thus deteriorates the dynamical performance of the overall PLL scheme.
Discrete Fundamental Frequency Detector—dFFE-UH
Reconstruction of variable {circumflex over (ω)}0,l involved in the dAQSG-UH (13) and in the dCM-UH (16) is performed by the following discrete fundamental frequency detector
where λ>0 is a design parameter representing the adaptation gain, and
The discrete fundamental frequency detector in the balanced case is reduced to
{tilde over (ω)}0,l+1={tilde over (ω)}0,l+Tsλ{tilde over (ν)}αβ,lTJ{circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,l
{circumflex over (ω)}0,l={tilde over (ω)}0,l+
Tuning of the dPLL-UH Method
For the tuning of λ and γ1 it is recommended to follow the following tuning rules
where τs represents the desired settling time, which is somehow related to the desired bandwidth of the overall scheme. These tuning rules may give a first approximation, and a refinement process must be followed.
For gains γk (k ∈ {3,5, . . . })the following rules are proposed
where τs,k represents the desired settling time for the envelope of the k-th harmonic component. In this case, it is assumed that the dUHO-k only influences the corresponding k-th harmonic, and that the dynamics of the simplified system (not including the dCM-UH) is, as mentioned above, a stable second order system. The influence of the simplified system is thus neglected, and each dUHOs can be tuned separately. As above, we have affected each γk (k ∈ {3,5, . . . }) by the sampling time Ts.
As the delivered signal {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,lp out of the dPLL-UH is a balanced sinusoidal signal, it may be represented as
is a rotation matrix, and
is the phasor of {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,lp at the l-th sampling instant, with {circumflex over (V)}d,l as as real and {circumflex over (V)}q,l as imaginary components, which are assumed to be constants.
Due to the digital implementation, the delivered signal {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,lp will exhibit an inherent delay of one sample time Ts. Therefore, a more realistic representation for such a signal would be
where the bar notation is used to refer to the delayed signal.
Notice that, using the properties of the rotation eJ{circumflex over (ω)}
Thus, to compensate for the delay, and thus to recuperate the non-delayed signal {circumflex over (ν)}αβ,1,lp, it is enough to rotate the delayed signal {circumflex over (
where the rotation matrix eK{circumflex over (ω)}
Notice that for an arbitrarily small Ts this matrix converges towards the 2×2 identity matrix I2, thus yielding no compensation effect.
For the numerical results, the following parameters have been selected λ=1.1 and γ1=400 , which approximately correspond to a settling time of τs=0.025 s. It is assumed that the reference signal also contains 3rd and 5th harmonics, and thus the dCM-UH contains dUHO-3 and dUHO-5 tuned at these harmonics.
The gains in the dCM-UH are fixed to γ3=γ5=100, which correspond to the settling time of τs,3=τs,5=22 ms for both UHOs. The reference signal has a nominal frequency of
As expected, the steady state error becomes even bigger for a lower sampling frequency. For instance,
In the above tests we have not considered harmonic distortion to clearly see steady state errors.
In the above, the disclosure and its embodiments are described generally relating to a reference voltage the frequency of which is to be detected. It is clear that this reference voltage can be, for example, a measured mains voltage with which a device having the implementation of the disclosure is to be synchronized.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the present invention can be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The presently disclosed embodiments are therefore considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restricted. The scope of the invention is indicated by the appended claims rather than the foregoing description and all changes that come within the meaning and range and equivalence thereof are intended to be embraced therein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11187366.7 | Nov 2011 | EP | regional |