The present invention concerns a method as set forth in the classifying portion of claim 1 and an apparatus for carrying out the method as set forth in the classifying portion of claim 8.
Double-fed asynchronous machines are used preferably in variable-speed systems, for example in high-power wind power installations, as a wave generator or in conjunction with flywheel mass storage means and uninterruptible power supplies. In general in such installations the stator of the asynchronous machine is connected to the mains network and the rotor is connected to a converter by way of slip rings. With such a converter a reference value of an electrical parameter can be impressed into the rotor. In general modern installations have a machine-side converter and a network-side converter which are connected together by way of an intermediate circuit. The advantage of the double-fed asynchronous machine over comparable systems lies in the reduced building work involved in the converter in comparison with the total power which can be fed into a network. That provides that a system having a double-fed asynchronous machine has a comparatively high level of efficiency.
In the course of the increasing number of wind power installations and the demands of the network operators, which are linked thereto and which are ever increasing, the performance of the double-fed asynchronous machine in the event of network asymmetries is increasingly of interest. As, in a double-fed asynchronous machine, the stator of the machine is connected directly to the network, network asymmetries result in asymmetric stator field distributions, this leading to unwanted reactions on the rotor field and the converters.
In the event of an asymmetric network voltage in particular harmonics occur, especially harmonic oscillations at double the network frequency, which are both detrimental for the power electronics as they lead to reactive power and intermediate circuit pendulations and also have a detrimental effect in terms of the mechanism as the harmonic oscillations generate corresponding torque oscillations which in particular heavily load the transmission.
Besides the harmonic oscillations at double the network frequency, which are primarily discussed hereinafter, unwanted higher harmonics can also occur—generally at lower amplitude—; this primarily involves the sixth and twelfth harmonics.
The object of the present invention is to detect the harmonics caused by asymmetric network voltage and to counteract same directly by a regulating procedure.
The aforementioned object is attained by means of a method having the features of independent claim 1 and by means of a correspondingly designed regulating unit as set forth by the features of claim 8.
Advantageous configurations of the invention are apparent from the appendant claims.
It is provided in accordance with the invention that respective currently prevailing machine parameters are measured and/or derived from other machine measurement parameters and the machine parameters are then decomposed by calculation respectively into a positive sequence system component, a negative sequence system component and optionally a DC component.
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention (see step (c1) in claim 1), for the positive sequence system components, the negative sequence system components and optionally for the DC components of the machine parameters, there are respectively separate regulating members for regulating an adjusting value, with which the respective components of the machine parameters are fed as input components and the output values of which are additively superposed, wherein the regulating members are so designed for regulating the adjusting value in such a way that torque, intermediate circuit voltage and/or reactive power pendulations are counteracted.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention as set forth in claim 4 regulation of the rotor voltage of a double-fed asynchronous machine is effected in such a way that the modal pendulum moments are eliminated either having regard to the DC components or with disregard of the DC components (see cases (c1i) and c1 ii) as set forth in claim 4).
When the DC components of the pendulum moments are taken into consideration the resulting torque is necessarily zero and an additional power regulation is not possible.
When the DC components are disregarded in contrast it is possible to regulatingly introduce an adaptable phase displacement between stator and rotor so that the resulting torque is not necessarily zero and at the same time a power regulation can also be effected.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention as set forth in claim 5 there is provided at least one regulating member to which the cross-product of the positive sequence system values and the negative sequence system values as well as the cross-product of the negative sequence system values and the positive sequence system values is fed as an input value, wherein that regulating member is adapted to regulate the adjusting value in such a way that second-order torque, intermediate circuit voltage and/or reactive power pendulations are counteracted.
The invention is described in greater detail hereinafter by way of example with reference to the Figures in which:
a andb show high-level diagrams of two embodiments of the regulating method according to the invention,
Modal description of the asynchronous machine:
The general linear equivalent-circuit diagram of the asynchronous machine, as shown in
In addition the machine model applies to any stator frequencies; thus it is also possible to simply describe multi-frequency systems on the basis of the superpositioning principle, for example:
U
1=U1p+U1n+U1dc (1)
U1p: positive sequence system component
U1n: negative sequence system component
U1dc: DC system component
This means for the regulator design that a parallel regulating circuit can be employed on the modal components of the respective frequencies which are of interest in terms of regulating procedure. The adjusting values of the parallel regulating circuits are then added up to give a total adjusting signal.
The embodiment describes torque regulation which in the event of network-frequency asymmetry and the occurrence of a direct current component, as a consequence of transient network voltage changes, suppresses pendulum moments.
In accordance with the regulator design there are provided three parallel regulating circuits:
I. torque regulating circuit for network-frequency positive sequence system components,
II. torque regulating circuit for network-frequency negative sequence system components,
III. torque regulating circuit for direct-current components.
The equivalent-circuit diagram shown in
A very important property of the machine can already be deduced from those equations if the voltage drops at the series impedances are disregarded:
U
2p
′≈s
p
U
1p
f
2p
=s
p
f
1
=s
p
f
Network
U
2n′≈(2−sp)U1n
f
2n
=s
n
f
1=(2−sp)fNetwork
U
2dc′≈(1−sp)U1dc
f
2dc
=s
dc
f
1=(1−sp)fNetwork (5a-c)
The rotor frequency for regulating the negative sequence system and DC components is substantially higher than the rotor frequency for regulating the positive sequence system component. Thus the required regulator or rotor voltage in the negative sequence system and in the DC system, for compensation of the associated modal component of the stator voltage, is also significantly higher than in the positive sequence system for the usual working range of −0.33<sp<0.33.
A particular limitation on the system lies in restricting the adjusting voltage on the rotor side by the maximum permissible intermediate circuit voltage.
When higher modal components occur in the negative sequence or DC system that requires proportionate distribution of the adjusting signal to the components to be regulated.
Determining the torque
The general equation for the air gap moment of the asynchronous machine is:
M=3pL1hI1I2′ sin γ=3pL1h(I1×I2′) {right arrow over (e)}z
sin γ=cos ∠(jI2′; I1 (6)
{right arrow over (e)}z: unit vector perpendicularly to the spatial vector plane
Alternatively the equation can be transformed to:
This means that there is no torque if the stator and rotor flux are in phase as then the vector product is “0”.
The vector product (ψ1×ψ2′) is afforded with the modal decomposition in accordance with (1) as:
The first three products of the decomposition, in the steady-state condition, form a constant torque, the following four products with the DC components are at network frequency; the last two generate a torque at double the network frequency.
The most straightforward method of suppressing the non-constant torques is regulating the rotor flux to ‘0’, but as a result the total moment is regulated to ‘0’ and the machine is operated in a severely under-regulated mode of operation. That high level of reactive power input is generally unwanted or prohibited.
A more network-friendly method is extinction of the mutually complementary products of the modal components:
ψ1p×ψ2dc′+ψ1dc×ψ2p 0
ψ1n×ψ2dc′+ψ1dc×ψ2n 0
ψ1p×ψ2n′+ψ1n×ψ2p 0 (9a-c)
Those equations can be transformed to:
ψ1p×ψ2dcψ2p′×ψ1dc
ψ1n×ψ2dcψ2n′×ψ1dc
ψ1p×ψ2nψ2p′×ψ1n (10a-c)
Those conditions can be met with:
Φ0: constant angle
A distinction must be drawn between the following two cases:
a) immediately after a voltage change there are DC components, all pendulum moments are to be suppressed
b) asymmetry after decay of the DC components or disregard of the pendulum moments by virtue of the DC components
The equations can only be simultaneously fulfilled if the following apply:
With this solution the constant moment is also at any event compelled to be “0”.
By means of the displacement angle Φ0 it is possible to set a specific torque so that power regulation remains possible. Possible pendulum moments as a consequence of DC components are not suppressed.
Depending on the respective preference solution a) or b) may be preferred; in particular immediately after occurrence of the asymmetry regulation can be effected in accordance with solution a) and later after decay of the DC components regulation can be effected in accordance with solution b).
The relationship values
can be determined having regard to the maximum adjusting value of the rotor voltage.
The magnitude of the total rotor voltage of the modal components may not exceed the maximum magnitude:
|U2|=|U2p+U2n+U2dc|≦U2,max (14)
A simplified and adequate estimate of the components can be implemented on the basis of the quasi-static rotor voltages which are induced by the stator flux modal components impressed by the network, having regard to (5) and disregarding the stray inductances:
Accordingly the required adjusting value is:
If that voltage is greater than that available there must be a reduction in the component. The reduction factor is:
The flux relationships can now be calculated therefrom in accordance with (12a) or (13a) as:
That means that amount, frequency and phase position of the rotor flux components to be set are uniquely determined and based thereon can be set with a modal rotor flux regulator.
Reference will be made to the overview illustrations in
In the case of the regulating variant shown in
In the regulating variant shown in
The two flux components ψ2p and ψ1p are predetermined by the primary power or torque regulation, and the value ψ1n is virtually impressed by the feed-in network. The vector regulator operating in parallel with primary regulation, as shown in
The operation of determining the modal components for pendulum moment suppression is described in detail in the following section with reference to
Flux observer:
The flux observer comprises the current model shown in
ψ1=Lh(I1+I2′)+L1σI1
ψ2=Lh(I1+I2′)+L2σI2′ (19,20)
The foregoing equations for determining the flux are implemented in the block diagram shown in
In a further embodiment it is alternatively also possible to use a voltage model of the double-fed asynchronous machine or a combination of both models.
Symbols in the Simulink diagrams, which are explained in detail hereinafter are the triangular symbol for multiplication with a constant and the circular symbol for a summing or difference-forming point.
The input values in
Modal components of the fluxes:
The operation of determining the modal components is effected as diagrammatically shown in
The network-frequency components are now decomposed with a suitable method into positive and negative sequence system.
Such methods are described for example in “Leistungsregelung von Windkraftanlagen mit doppeltgespeister Asynchronmaschine bei Netzunsymmetrie”, S. M.-Engelhardt, H. Wrede, J. Kretschmann, VDI-Berichte No. 1963, 2006, wherein that document is made subject-matter of the present disclosure in respect of those methods. In particular in accordance with the specified document methods of separation into positive and negative sequence systems are proposed—briefly outlined hereinafter:
In accordance with a first method filtering of the signals is effected as follows: as the instantaneous values do not allow separation of positive and negative sequence systems, the spatial vector is firstly to be generated with a known transformation to the α/β system which is fixed in relation to the stator, in which the negative sequence system is represented as a mathematically negatively rotating 50 (or 60) Hz system. To separate negatively and positively rotating systems from each other in the time domain, it is necessary to implement a phase displacement as a filter is basically not suitable for that purpose. The phase displacement can be very easily carried out in relation to a vector by angle transformation. In the present case a frequency displacement through 50 (60) Hz is selected as negative as then the negative sequence system becomes equality. The positive sequence system is in the form of a 100 (120) Hz component. In that way it is possible on the one hand to use a low pass for separation of the signals while on the other hand there are no particular dynamic demands in terms of regulation. It is possible to use a relatively slow regulator to minimise side effects on the positive sequence system regulation.
Frequency transformation itself is to be implemented with a relatively harmonics-free angle to minimise coupling-in of interference. A fixed presetting in respect of the transformation frequency would be ideal; in that case however, in relation to network frequencies not equal to 50 (60) Hz which are to be expected in future in weaker networks, the negative sequence system would no longer involve equality but would be at lower frequency. That would have an adverse effect on the requirement for decoupling of positive and negative sequence system regulation as phase transit times become increasingly dominant in the event of greater departures from the nominal frequency and result in a reduced stability limit.
A good compromise involves generation of the transformation angle from the phase angle of the network voltage spatial vector with subsequent smoothing by way of a PLL with a low cut-off frequency.
In accordance with a further method filtering can be effected as proposed in H. Wrede. “Beiträge zur Erhöhung von Versorgungssicherheit und Spannungsqualität in der Übertragung und Verteilung elektrischer Energie durch leistungselektronische Betriebsmittel”, Aachen, Shaker Verlag, 2004, pages 45ff.
In addition to the above-described signal decomposition, calculation of the reduction factor kred is effected in accordance with equations (16) and (17).
Regulating variant as shown in
Actual regulation of the rotor voltage involves respectively using a flux regulator for the positive sequence system component, the negative sequence system component and the DC component, which is shown by reference to the example of the negative sequence system regulator in the Simulink diagram in
Regulation is effected in the embodiment in accordance with equations (16)-(18) (that is to say regulation for the above-described case (b) in the event of asymmetry after decay of the DC components or disregard of the pendulum moments by virtue of the DC components).
Accordingly the rotor voltage, for compensation of the reduced component of the stator negative sequence system flux, is calculated as follows:
U
2n
′=−j2π(2−sp)fNetworkkredψ1n (21)
That input-controlled value is so adapted by the PI regulator 30, in respect of the difference in the fluxes, that the rotor flux component assumes the above-described values.
In particular the vector of ψ2 and the vector of ψ1kred are respectively fed into the PI regulator 30 as reference and actual values respectively, whereby regulation is effected to a reference condition in accordance with equation (15).
The rotor voltage, obtained in that way, for compensation of the reduced component of the stator negative sequence system flux is finally impressed on the rotor voltage by way of the rotor-side converter 6.
The other components for compensation of the stator positive sequence system flux and the stator flux DC components are ascertained in similar fashion and additively superposed, as shown in
Regulating variant as shown in
In regard to a detailed description for deriving the torque components and the required flux model, attention is directed to the foregoing description.
The torque-proportional components are calculated as:
t
1=ψ2p,alpha·ψ1n,beta−ψ2p,beta ·ψ1n,alpha
t
2=ψ1p,alpha·ψ2n,beta−ψ1p,beta ·ψ2n,alpha (22a, b);
These are sine values of double the mains network frequency.
To bring those two values into conformity in respect of amount and phase position a respective virtual spatial vector is generated in a similar manner to the method according to Lê, see
The difference in amount and angle is then eliminated with two PI regulators, see the view in
To provide a faster regulating performance it is appropriate to implement pilot control of the induction voltage from the stator flux negative sequence system. That voltage then only has to be corrected in amount and angle by the regulators.
In accordance with the foregoing description, adjusting signal limitation is required for the regulator, for stability reasons and for prioritisation of the positive and negative sequence system regulation.
Selection of the various regulating modes:
Regulation as shown in
After decay of the DC components and in fault-free operation of the system power regulation is in the foreground so that the regulation as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2007 039 697.1 | Aug 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2008/060495 | 8/9/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/19/2010 |