The instant invention relates modular scalable power converters and methods of converting power using modular scalable power converters.
Utility-scale photovoltaic (PV) inverters are predominantly built with single-stage topologies that interface with an externally installed low-voltage to medium-voltage line frequency transformer. Given the costs, maintenance, and power losses associated with line-frequency transformers, manufacturers are investigating transformerless architectures that produce medium-voltage ac (MVAC) directly. To achieve this aim, multilevel inverters act as a natural choice because the large number of series-connected devices not only allows for increased voltage blocking but also enables the synthesis of high-quality waveforms; however, existing multilevel inverters require bulky passive components that add costs or centralized controllers that impede scalability.
Existing transformerless topologies for utility-scale inverters fall under the following system types: i) modular multilevel converters (MMCs) with cascaded half- or full-bridge cells, and ii) systems containing interconnected active-bridge converters. One limitation of the MMC for PV applications stems from the fact that the dc input voltage must exceed the peak ac voltage. Since PV string voltages are typically at or less than 1.5 kV, this necessitates an additional boost converter stage to enable a MVAC output, which adds costs and decreases efficiency. Further, since the MMC is composed of distinct phase legs that each process pulsating power, MMC cells require large capacitor banks and a centralized voltage balancing controller.
On the other hand, systems of active-bridge converters facilitate large voltage-conversion ratios facilitated by isolation transformers. For instance, active-bridge converters are often connected in parallel at the low-voltage PV input, and the output sides can be cascaded to produce MVAC. Although this acts as a key advantage over MMCs for PV systems, existing approaches still rely on centralized controllers, which impede scalability and act as a single point of failure. Furthermore, depending on the type of control strategy, large dc-link capacitors may still be needed.
A cascaded architecture composed of interconnected blocks that are each designed to process constant power and eliminate bulk energy storage are provided. Further, local controls within each block natively achieve both block- and system-level aims, making the system modular and scalable. Further methods of providing power conversion using such interconnected clocks are also provided.
In one implementation, a photovoltaic (PV) inverter architecture comprises stackable dc to three-phase ac converter blocks. In this particular implementation, several such blocks, each containing a converter power stage and controls, are connected in series on their ac sides to obtain transformerless medium-voltage ac interfaces for PV power plants. The series-connected structure is enabled by a quadruple active bridge dc-dc converter that provides isolation between the PV input and each of the three ac-side phases within each block. Furthermore, since incoming PV power is transferred as constant balanced three-phase ac power, instantaneous input-output power balance bypasses the need for bulk energy storage. To streamline implementation and maximize system scalability and resilience, decentralized block-level controllers accomplish dc-link voltage regulation, maximum power point tracking, and ac-side power sharing without centralized control. The proposed architecture is validated by simulations of a PV string to medium-voltage ac system comprising six blocks and, on a proof-of-concept hardware prototype that comprises three cascaded converter blocks
The blocks can provide scalability in voltage and/or power in various implementations.
The foregoing and other aspects, features, details, utilities, and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from reading the following description and claims, and from reviewing the accompanying drawings.
In the dc-ac converter module 10, the module has isolation between the dc port and each one of the one or more single-phase ac ports.
The dc-ac converter module 10 may be bi-directional or uni-directional in either direction. Further, individual dc-ac converter modules 10 may be configured in virtually any configuration, such as coupled in series, in parallel, and/or in series and/or parallel with one or more other modules as needed for any particular application.
To obtain a modular, scalable and resilient system, one implementation of an architecture comprises fully modular blocks that have self-contained power electronics circuitry and autonomous controls, as shown in
Since dc to three-phase ac conversion is accomplished within a single block, a set of block-level controls is provided to achieve system-wide objectives. In one implementation, for example, decentralized controllers are provided that achieve dc-link voltage regulation, maximum power point tracking (MPPT), and power sharing across the ac stack. Thus, the contributions are provided not only on the power stage, but also on the accompanying controls that can enable modular PV-to-MVAC systems without bulky line-frequency transformers.
Architecture Overview for an Example Photovoltaic System
Because of the distributed system architecture, vector and matrix notation may be used where a column-vector x is denoted as x:=[x1, . . . , xN]T. Next, diag−1(x) denotes a matrix with diagonal entries given by the elements x and zeros elsewhere. By extension, diag−1 (x) has diagonal entries of [x−11, . . . , x−1N]T. A vector of length l containing all ones is given by 1l. Three-phase quantities are compactly written as x:=[xa, xb, xc]T. To facilitate analysis, switched signals averaged over a sliding window of duration T are denoted as:
The overall system in
The converter stack interfaces with a medium-voltage grid that can be modeled as the balanced voltages vg:=[vga, vgb, vgc]T. The impedance z encapsulates the grid-side filter. A single timing reference unit is contained within the system and is used to broadcast the grid frequency ω, the grid voltage a-phase zero crossings (via a binary reset signal), and the grid voltage amplitude Vg to all N block modules. In this implementation, these signals are generated by a phase-locked loop (PLL).
The N block modules can have identical control structures. dc-side measurements can be processed by the MPPT controller which in turn modulates the three-phase ac-side voltage magnitude. The QAB can be controlled with three identical dc-link voltage controllers, denoted as Gdc. Finally, the k-th three-phase output ac side can be controlled to act like sinusoidal voltage sources vda,k:=[vda,k, vdb,k, vdc,k]T behind a virtual droop resistance Rd.
Circuit and Control Analysis
Power Stage Description
The four QAB bridges are controlled by phase shift modulation (PSM) where the primary bridge transistors are switched at a fixed frequency, fQ=1/TQ, and 50% duty ratio. Furthermore, the rising edge of the kth primary-side switch signal acts as a phase reference for its respective three secondaries where the phase shifts of the a-, b-, and c-side bridges are ϕa,k, ϕb,k, and ϕc,k, respectively. Assuming small phase shifts, the average current delivered by the a-phase secondary can be approximated as:
where expressions for b and c-phase secondary currents take correspondingly similar forms.
As a consequence of the proposed dc-link control strategy (described in Section III-B), pulsating power is delivered by each QAB secondary and transferred directly to the grid-side inverters (see Pa,k, Pb,k, and Pc,k in
Each grid-side H-bridge inverter is modulated via sine-triangle unipolar PWM such that each bridge provides a three-level voltage waveform. Switch interleaving among the N cascaded H-bridges in each phase is obtained by uniformly phase shifting the N carrier waveforms amongst the block modules. Here, carrier interleaving is obtained via a combination of the PLL zero-crossing reset signal, which acts as a time reference for all units, and the locally computed phase shift based on the block module index number. Accordingly, the three-phase stack voltages, ΣNk=1vk, take on 2N+1 levels for each ac phase.
Regarding system-level design, the number of cascaded units can be decided based on the grid voltage rating. Furthermore, the number of cascaded units and their cumulative voltage rating should be chosen with sufficient margin such that a small number of failed units can be bypassed without interrupting system operation. Last, system expansion can be done in discrete stages (add a new stack of N block modules) instead of incrementally (add one block-module to an existing stack).
Control Design
The timing reference unit contains a PLL that computes ω and Vg. A zero-crossing detector is triggered when the PLL angle, θa, crosses zero. In one implementation, a PLL that comprises a compensator in closed loop with an abc-to-dq coordinate transformation can be used. Since the grid voltage, Vg, and frequency, ω, typically stay close to constant over any given ac cycle, the value of ω is transmitted to all N blocks only once each ac cycle along with the zero-crossing reset signal. This strategy can minimize or at least reduce the broadcast bandwidth requirements and eases implementation. Also note that the timing reference unit performs no module-level or system-level control functions, and that it performs only low-bandwidth unidirectional communication to the block modules, with no information needed from the block modules.
Next, consider the secondary-side QAB dc-link voltage regulators shown in
The closed-loop dynamics for each dc link within the kth module can be represented using
For the sake of design, it can be assumed vpvk is near its nominal maximum power point (MPP) voltage and use standard linear systems analysis to tune Gdc(s). The bandwidth of the dc-link controller is designed to be sufficiently higher than twice the line frequency (>>ω/π) so that the dc-link voltages are well regulated while each phase delivers single-phase ac power.
As a consequence of the dc-link control strategy, the PV input 201 and ac grid sides 210 are directly coupled, much like a single-stage three-phase inverter. Accordingly, PV MPPT is directly tied to the grid-side control strategy and the dc-links are controlled independently via the QAB phase shifts. To achieve autonomous power sharing among cascaded units, each set of ac phase terminals can be modulated to track the droop-controlled average value:
vkTH=vkd−Rdi, (4)
where TH=f1H is the switching period for all H-bridges, the three-phase voltages are:
and θa is a locally generated copy of the PLL angle within each block module. To ensure (4) is satisfied, the modulation signals for the kth set of H-bridges are given by:
The PV-side MPPT influences grid-side power delivery by modulating the droop voltage amplitude Vdk. As shown in
where Ak is a voltage adjustment factor produced by the MPPT. Although a variety of MPPT algorithms are compatible with this setup, a simple perturb and observe method can be utilized that adjusts Ak up/down with a fixed step size, ΔA, and periodically at TPO as shown in
Steady-State System Analysis
How the grid-side voltage and current waveforms depend on PV-side conditions can be analyzed. For example, the general case where PV string power is nonuniform among the N block modules can be considered first, and a special case where each PV string produces identical power can also be analyzed.
The one-line phasor diagram labeled (a) in
Vk=√{square root over (2|va,kd−Rdia|22π/ω)}, (8)
where the ac quantities on the right-hand side of (8) are assumed to be in sinusoidal steady state. Since the inverter filter, z, is designed to filter high-order harmonics, it can be assumed it has negligible impedance at the grid frequency. After neglecting z (for all analysis that follows) and summing voltages, a simplified representation labeled (b) as shown in
Nonuniform Power Delivery:
Kirchhoff's laws give the following general expressions for the stack current and grid power:
where P denotes the power absorbed by the grid. In (9), it is evident that the output current and grid power depends on the MPPT outputs, A1, . . . , AN, as well as the QAB-turns ratio, PV voltages, and the number of modules.
From (9), the magnitude of the voltage across the kth H-bridge then follows as:
The efficiency of the kth converter as ηk and the PV power is denoted as Ppvk:=ipvk vpvk. The conservation of energy then allows us to obtain the following expression, which illuminates the relationship between PV power production and grid-side voltage distribution across the stack:
Uniform Power Generation:
In the case where all dc-side PV strings produce identical power, the general expressions in simplify and yield insights into system behavior. These set of conditions should closely match those of well-designed large-scale PV plants (e.g., minimal partial shading or other mismatch factors) during nominal operation. If A=A1, . . . , AN, η=η1, . . . , ηN and vpv=vpv1, . . . , vpvN, these relationships become:
Here, (13) demonstrates that voltage and power sharing are natively obtained via the proposed droop control method.
System Validation
System operation, including operation of the dc-link controllers, string level MPP tracking, and ac-side power sharing without a central controller are verified by simulations reported in Achanta, Prasanta K., Johnson, Brian B., Seo, Gab-Su, Maksimovic, Dragan, A Multi-Level DC to Three-Phase AC Architecture for Photovoltaic Power Plants, IEEE Transactions on Energy Conversion, Vol. 34, No. 1, March 2019, pp. 181-190, in Section IV-A and experiments in Section IV-B, the entire document of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if fully set forth herein.
String PV-to-MVAC System Simulations
This section describes an example implementation for a representative 600 kW system connected to a 13.2 kV medium-voltage grid using N=6 block modules connected in series, as shown in
To demonstrate the system's ability to operate with mismatched PV strings,
To further illustrate the ability of the system to perform under extreme mismatches, simulations are performed for the case where multiple PV strings generate zero power (see
In the case where a failure is detected within a block, that module can be shorted while still maintaining system operation. A scenario where block module #6 is bypassed is recreated in simulation, and the resulting waveforms are shown in
A scaled proof-of-concept prototype including three block modules has been constructed to verify system operation by experiments. The system parameters are summarized in Table II, and a single 250 W block module prototype is displayed in
Using the prototype block modules, three sets of experimental results are provided to verify the key operational principles and feasibility. First, a single block module with PV at its input is presented to verify its fundamental functions, including dc-link regulation and MPPT operation. Next, experiments with N=3 cascaded block modules demonstrate the following: parallel-input series-three-phase-output operation, multi-level voltage synthesis, and grid-tied operation with a start-up sequence. The parameters for each setup are summarized in Table II.
Operation of Block Module with PV:
A single block module sourced by a PV module and connected to a balanced resistive load was considered. An objective is to demonstrate i) a well-defined start-up sequence, ii) dc-link voltage regulation and power balance without bulky decoupling capacitors, and iii) MPPT operation.
In this setup, a block module is sourced by a 175 W PV module with nominal MPP voltage vpv=36.8 V.
Stand-Alone Cascaded Operation of Three Block Modules:
Following the module-level MPPT demonstration, a multi-converter system with a voltage source across the inputs and a resistive ac-side load is considered. The three block modules are connected in series, as shown in
The bandwidth of each dc-link controller is 1.6 kHz, which is sufficiently high to ensure tightly regulated voltages during most transients. Each dc-link capacitor is minimally sized since it only needs to filter switching ripple. This is illustrated in
Grid-Tied Cascaded Operation:
To verify grid-tied operation such as start-up, the system of three block modules is connected to a three-phase grid, as shown in
A PV inverter architecture comprising a plurality of stackable dc to three-phase ac converter block modules is provided in various example implementations. In one implementation, for example, several such blocks, each containing autonomous controls and a converter, are connected in series on their ac sides to obtain MVAC interfaces for PV power plants without the need for bulky line-frequency transformers. Each block module comprises a quadruple active bridge (QAB) dc-dc converter and three single-phase inverters. The QAB provides isolation between the PV input and each of the three ac-side phases within each block module. Since incoming PV power is transferred as constant balanced three-phase ac power, instantaneous input-output power balance is maintained, and bulk energy storage is unnecessary. A suite of controllers is provided to ensure MPPT, dc-link voltage regulation, and/or ac-side voltage sharing across the stack. Taken together, the converter structure and distributed controls enable a modular and scalable system architecture. The proposed architecture is validated in a simulation of a medium-voltage 13.2 kV system and in a scaled proof-of-concept experimental prototype comprised of three 250 W block module.
Although implementations have been described above with a certain degree of particularity, those skilled in the art could make numerous alterations to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of this invention. For example, although many implementations described herein are described with reference to photovoltaic (PV) applications, PV applications are only one possible application for the converter modules and system architectures described herein. All directional references (e.g., upper, lower, upward, downward, left, right, leftward, rightward, top, bottom, above, below, vertical, horizontal, clockwise, and counterclockwise) are only used for identification purposes to aid the reader's understanding of the present invention, and do not create limitations, particularly as to the position, orientation, or use of the invention. Joinder references (e.g., attached, coupled, connected, and the like) are to be construed broadly and may include intermediate members between a connection of elements and relative movement between elements. As such, joinder references do not necessarily infer that two elements are directly connected and in fixed relation to each other. It is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not limiting. Changes in detail or structure may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/637,645 entitled “Modular Scalable Power Conversion” and filed Mar. 2, 2018 and U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/814,709 entitled “Modular Scalable Power Conversion” and filed on Mar. 6, 2019, each application of which is hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
This invention was made with government support under Award No. DE-AC36-08GO28308 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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