The invention relates to a submodule for a modular multilevel converter comprising at least one unipolar energy storage device, a first and a second connection terminal and a power semiconductor circuit comprising power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off by means of a control signal and free-wheeling diodes connected in parallel with an assigned power semiconductor switch in the opposite direction, wherein, depending on the control of the power semiconductor switches, the voltage dropping across one or all of the energy storage devices or else a zero voltage can be generated between the first and the second connection terminals, and wherein the power semiconductor circuit forms a bridging branch situated between the potential points of the first and second connection terminals.
A submodule of this kind is already known by way of example from DE 101 03 031. A multilevel converter is disclosed therein which has phase modules which each have an alternating voltage connection for a phase of an alternating voltage network to be connected and two direct voltage connections which are provided for connection of a direct voltage intermediate circuit. A phase module branch extends between the alternating voltage connection and each direct voltage connection. The two phase module branches of a phase module are connected to the remaining phase module branches like what is known as a “graetz bridge”. Each phase module branch has a series circuit comprising submodules which are each equipped with a unipolar storage capacitor. Connected in parallel with the storage capacitor is a series circuit comprising two power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off and with which one free-wheeling diode respectively is connected in parallel in the opposite direction. Said controllable power semiconductor switches are arranged in the series circuit with the same forward direction. The known submodule also has two connection terminals, wherein one connection terminal is directly connected to a pole of the storage capacitor and the other connection terminal is connected to the potential point which is situated between the two controllable power semiconductor switches. Depending on the control of the power semiconductor switches, either the capacitor voltage dropping across the storage capacitor or else a zero voltage can therefore be applied at the two connection terminals of each submodule. As a result of the series connection the total voltage of each phase module branch can be adjusted in stages, wherein the level of the stages is fixed by the voltage dropping across the storage capacitor.
Controllable power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off are also known from practical experience which are reverse conductive. These power semiconductor switches no longer require free-wheeling diodes connected in parallel in the opposite direction therefore. Compared to non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches, reverse conductive power semiconductor switches have the advantage that a lower forward voltage drops across them during normal operation, so losses are reduced compared with non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches. The reverse conductive power semiconductor switches have the inherent disadvantage, however, that they are expensive compared to the power semiconductor switches without reverse conductivity which are already commercially available.
The object of the invention is therefore to provide a submodule of the type mentioned in the introduction which has lower losses during normal operation and is also inexpensive.
The invention achieves this object in that only the power semiconductor switches arranged in the bridging branch are reverse conductive power semiconductor switches.
Within the scope of the invention a submodule for a modular multilevel converter is provided which has reverse conductive power semiconductor switches. Since submodules of the type mentioned in the introduction and reverse conductive power semiconductor switches are both known, complete replacement of the previously used non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches with reverse conductive power semiconductor switches would be obvious. A submodule of this kind would then be identified in each case by lower forward voltages and therefore lower operating losses than a known submodule. According to the invention it has, however, been recognized that power semiconductor switches, which are arranged between the connection terminals, are stressed to a greater level than power semiconductor switches which are not arranged between the connection terminals. This recognition is the result of complex calculations and simulations which are not intended to be a subject matter of the present invention. As a result of this recognition, within the scope of the invention the reverse conductive controllable power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off are arranged solely in the bridging branch of the submodule which is situated between the potential points of the connection terminals. These are therefore the power semiconductor switches which during normal operation of the submodule are heavily stressed, in particular in the case of applications in the field of energy transfer and distribution. The use of reverse conductive power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off means the forward voltage can be reduced. Within the scope of the invention the less heavily stressed power semiconductor switches are power semiconductor switches which do not have reverse conductivity and with which therefore, as is known from the prior art, free-wheeling diodes are connected in parallel in the opposite direction. These power semiconductor switches are significantly less expensive to obtain. Since the less expensive power semiconductor switches are used only at less heavily stressed parts of the submodule, the losses, which result owing to an increased forward voltage, are acceptable.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention a unipolar energy storage device is provided with which a series circuit comprising power semiconductor switches that can be turned on and off and with an identical forward direction is connected in parallel, wherein the first connection terminal is connected to a first pole of the energy storage device and the second connection terminal is connected to a potential point situated between the controllable power semiconductor switches. The circuit of a submodule of this kind is basically known, wherein, however, according to the invention the heavily stressed power semiconductor switch is a reverse conductive power semiconductor switch. During operation this power semiconductor switch is heavily stressed so the use of just one reverse conductive power semiconductor switch in the bridging branch between the connection terminals is already enough to reduce operating losses. The power semiconductor switch not situated between the connection terminals is, as in the prior art, a non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switch with which a free-wheeling diode is connected in parallel in the opposite direction.
In a departure from this, according to a further variant of the invention a first energy storage device and a second energy storage device, connected in series with respect to the first energy storage device, are provided and two reverse conductive power semiconductor switches with identical forward direction are arranged in the bridging branch, wherein the potential point between the reverse conductive power semiconductor switches is connected to the potential point between the first and the second energy storage devices, and wherein the bridging branch is connected by a first power semiconductor switch with a first free-wheeling diode in the opposite direction to a pole of the second energy storage device and by a second power semiconductor switch with a free-wheeling diode in the opposite direction to a pole of the first energy storage device, so the bridging branch is switched between the non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches, and wherein all power semiconductor switches are arranged in series and with the same forward direction. According to this advantageous development a double module is provided which is likewise known as such. Within the scope of the invention only the power semiconductor switches situated between connection terminals are chosen as reverse conductive power semiconductor switches in the case of said double module since these power semiconductor switches are more heavily stressed during operation of a multilevel converter than the power semiconductor switches which are not situated between the connection terminals.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention each reverse conductive power semiconductor switch is of such a kind that an optimally low forward voltage drops across it. Reverse conductive power semiconductor switches, by way of example reverse conductive Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistors (IGBT) may be optimized in different ways. An interaction between what is known as the “reverse recovery charge” in diode mode on one hand and the forward voltage in the diode mode and power semiconductor switching mode on the other hand exist in this connection. A low reverse recovery charge therefore leads to higher forward voltages in the IGBT and in the diode mode. Optimization of the reverse conductive IGBT can therefore lead either to lower forward losses or else to low switching losses. According to this advantageous development the reverse conductive power semiconductor switches are optimized for low forward voltages.
A control unit for controlling the controllable power semiconductor switches is expediently provided, wherein the control unit is set up such that the non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches can be turned on more slowly compared with all the reverse conductive controllable power semiconductor switches. If the power semiconductor switch(es) arranged between the connection terminals is/are optimized for low forward voltages, high storage charges result if the reverse conductive power semiconductor switch acts as a diode, i.e. conducts a current counter to its switchable forward direction. The high storage charges of the reverse conductive power semiconductor switches lead in the case of the non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switch(es) connected in series to high turn-on losses but the high turn-on losses are less disruptive in the case of the less heavily stressed power semiconductor switches which are not arranged in the bridging branch since these power semiconductor switches, as has been recognized within the scope of the invention, are less heavily stressed. The high turn-on currents are limited by slower turning on, so the risk of these power semiconductor switches being destroyed is reduced.
According to a further expedient development the power semiconductor switches not arranged in the bridging branch are optimized such that they have an optimally low storage charge. The low storage charge in turn minimizes the switch-on losses in the power semiconductor switches, connected in series, of the bridging branch which are reverse conductive and particularly heavily stressed. The switch-on losses of the heavily stressed reverse conductive power semiconductor switches are minimized in this way. The higher forward losses of the less heavily stressed power semiconductor switches are less disruptive.
A control unit for controlling the controllable power semiconductor switches is expediently provided, wherein the control unit is set up such that the non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches can be turned on more slowly compared with the reverse conductive controllable power semiconductor switches. This reduces the losses which occur in the case of the reverse conductive power semiconductor switches in diode mode owing to the high storage charges, at the expense of the turn-on losses of the non-reverse conductive power semiconductor switches. This is advantageous since the latter are less heavily stressed.
The invention also relates to a multilevel converter with a submodule as claimed in any one of the preceding claims.
Further expedient developments and advantages of the invention are the subject matter of the following description of exemplary embodiments of the invention with reference to the figures in the drawings, wherein identical reference characters denote components with the same effect and wherein
If the power semiconductor switch T1 is transferred into its forward position, in which a current flow across T1 in the illustrated passage direction is enabled, the power semiconductor switch T2 has to be transferred into its blocking position to avoid a short circuit of the storage capacitor 14. The same applies in the reverse case. If the power semiconductor switch T1 is switched into its passage position therefore, the power semiconductor switch T2 is transferred into a locking position, so the capacitor voltage of the Uc storage capacitor 14 drops across the connection terminals 16 and 17. In the reverse case the first connection terminal 16 is connected by the power semiconductor switch T2 that can be turned off to the first connection terminal, so a zero voltage drops across the connection terminals 16, 17. In a phase module branch 12 shown in
Reverse conductive power semiconductor switches are also known from the prior art that can be turned on and off by means of a control signal in their passage direction and are also conductive counter to their switchable passage direction. In other words, a current flow in the passage direction can be interrupted if the reverse conductive power semiconductor switch is transferred into its blocking position. The current flow across the reverse conductive power semiconductor switches in the passage direction can then only be enabled if it is actively transferred from its blocking position into its passage position by means of a control signal. For a current which flows in a direction opposing that of the forward direction, the reverse conductive power semiconductor switch always remains conductive independent of the applied control signal. The power semiconductor switch therefore acts like a diode for this current direction. Parallel connection of a diode in the opposite direction has become unnecessary due to the return conductivity.
The reverse conductive IGBT 19 can accordingly be optimized in two directions. On the one hand it can be adjusted such that a lower forward voltage drops across it. The forward voltage is the voltage which drops across the power semiconductor switch 19 for both current directions. A low forward voltage has lower losses as a result. If, however, the reverse conductive IGBT is optimized such that it has low forward voltages in the IGBT and diode modes, then for physical reasons this is at the expense of high reverse recovery charges. A high reverse recovery charge results in high turn-on losses, however.
If in
The second and third power semiconductor switches 19 of the series circuit 23 are reverse conductive power semiconductor switches 19. Both are in turn designed for low forward losses and form a comparatively high reverse recovery charge. To avoid destruction of T1 and T4, compared with the switching times of the reverse conductive power semiconductor switch 19 in the bridging branch 18, these are turned on slowly by a control unit (not shown). The statements made with regard to the switch according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 006 345.5 | Mar 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP12/54462 | 3/14/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/27/2013 |