ECTE324/8324 Power Engineering 1
Week 9
Prof. Sarath Perera
Phone: 4221 3405 Room: 35-G33
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Topics for Today
• Power Electronics
◦ Introduction
◦ Linear Amplifiers
• The Diode Rectifier (ac to dc).
• The Chopper (dc to dc).
• The Inverter (dc to ac).
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Topic 7: Introduction to Power Electronics
• Power conversion: modify electric power at high efficiency.
◦ i.e. change frequency, voltage, waveform, no of phases etc.
• Power electronics: study of electronic switching circuits for power
conversion
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Power Electronics
• Applications.
◦ Electronic power supplies (ac → LV dc) in computers, office
equipment, entertainment, communications, broadcasting etc.
◦ AC motor speed control (ac → variable f and V ac) in manufacturing
processes, machine tools, robots, transport
◦ Frequency conversion (ac → another ac) in lighting, induction
furnaces
◦ Renewable power supplies (photovoltaic, wind) where variable LV dc
and variable ac → fixed ac
◦ Battery supplied equipment (laptop computers, mobile phones, etc)
variable dc gives several fixed dc
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Power Electronics
• Classification of power conversion by frequency conversion:
TO
AC DC
AC Cycloconverter and Matrix Converter Rectifier
FROM
DC Inverter Chopper
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Linear Amplifiers
• Linear amplifiers are not suitable for high power applications.
(1) vT
Is
R
ns that the device T vdc T Vo
e desired voltage
r) is continually
linear power supply
produce constant
• According to KVL,
Vo = Vdc − VT
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Linear Amplifiers
• Linear amplifier means that the device T is controlled to give the desired
voltage across R continuously.
• Although Vdc (output from a rectifier) is continually varying, VT tracks it to
produce constant Vo using a complex feedback circuit.
• Hence linear power supply problems arise:
◦ control device dissipates a lot of power and needs large heat sink
◦ circuit is inefficient
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Linear Amplifier Example
A linear amplifier with a 20 V supply has a 10 Ω resistor to be supplied at 5 V. What is (i) the
load power, (ii) device loss, (iii) circuit efficiency?
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Power Electronic Switches
• Power Diode
A C
◦ anode, cathode
◦ forward and reverse directions
◦ device can conduct in forward direction (s/c) and blocks in reverse
direction
◦ available ratings 5 kV, 5 kA, useful to hundreds of kHz at lower ratings
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Power Electronic Switches
• Thyristor or Silicon Controller Rectifier (SCR)
G
A C
ction if triggered at the gate
◦ anode, cathode and gate (control terminal)
◦ forward and reverse directions
◦ device can conduct in forward direction if triggered at the gate
terminal (s/c) and blocks in reverse direction
◦ power gain better than 106
◦ available ratings 5 kV, 3 kA, useful to 500 Hz
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Power Electronic Switches
• Power MOSFET - Metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor.
oxide semiconductor field- D
◦ source, drain and gate (control terminal)
◦ forward and reverse directions
◦ available ratings 1200 V, 10 A, 50 kHz
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Power Electronic Switches
• IGBT - Insulated gate bipolar transistor
C
E
as linear amplifier with v
◦ emitter, collector, gate (control terminal)
◦ forward and reverse directions
◦ device can be operated as linear amplifier with V control at gate
◦ available ratings 2 kV, 500 A, 20 kHz
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Power Electronics
• The power system must operate at a constant voltage and frequency.
• There are many devices that require different voltages and frequencies.
• Power electronics provides a way to convert from one voltage to another
at various frequencies.
◦ Modern appliances all demand electronic power supply with a mix of
dc voltages.
◦ Modern drive systems (electric motors) utilise variable speeds.
◦ Renewable energy generation doesn’t always natively provide the
correct voltage level or frequency.
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Power Electronic Devices
• A variety of devices used on power electronic applications have been
presented.
◦ Diode
◦ Thyristor or SCR
◦ MOSFET
◦ IGBT
• These devices for the basis of numerous power conversion circuits.
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Rectifier Circuit
• Used to convert AC to DC.
• For example, electronic power supply front end, ac motor drive supply
front end.
D1 D2
io
is
vs C vo
Single phase full
wave bridge to dc load eg SMPS,
rectifier circuit ac drive etc
D3 D4
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Rectifier Waveforms
• Load voltage vo is not smooth.
• Supply current is is not sinusoidal.
sinusoidal
is (with C)
vs
vo (with C)
vo (without C)
v ripple 'V
• If ripple is not too high,
√
Vo = 2Vs = Vpk
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Rectifier Application in an SMPS
• The term ‘Switched Mode Power Supply’ (SMPS) refers to a family of
devices that
are able to convert from one voltage to another using a switching regulator.
voltage sensing
control hf
circuit dc output #1
rectifier
Vo I 0
mains lf hf
supply inverter dc output #2
rectifier rectifier
hf transformers with multiple secondaries
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Relationship Between AC and DC
• Many rectifier loads have feedback to ensure constant output dc power
for a wide range of ac input voltages.
• E.g. a switched mode power supply (SMPS) set at 10 V will deliver a
fixed 10 V at a fixed current.
◦ Hence it will supply constant output power although ac voltage
changes.
◦ Assuming its efficiency is roughly constant, it will accept constant
power input.
Po = Pload /η
where η is 75-99%.
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Relationship Between AC and DC
• If supply rectifier output Vo reduces, Io will increase to maintain constant
power into SMPS.
• Hence the line current increases as the supply voltage reduces.
Io = Po /Vo
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SMPS Example
A rectifier is the front end of a SMPS with an output of 15 V, 5 A and an efficiency of 75%.
Determine Io if Vo is 319 V.
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Capacitor Selection
• The capacitor at the output of rectifier should be chosen based on
acceptable current and ripple voltage.
• Assume dc load is drawing an approximate constant current Io
• T = 1/f where f is the supply frequency
dv
i=C
dt
• Take worse case of decay over half period 1/2f
∆V
Io = C
1/2f
giving
Io
∆V =
2f C
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Capacitor Selection
• Alternatively
Io
C=
2f ∆V
• Also if the maximum dc voltage is the supply voltage peak
Vo = Vpk − ∆V /2
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Capacitor Choice Example
In the previous example, what should be the value of C to keep Vo at 319 V?
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Hold-up Time
• This is the time in cycles that the circuit can continue to operate if the
supply fails.
• It gives an idea of how long a power system fault has to be before a dc
power supply will fail.
• Increasing C gives better smoothing and increases hold-up time.
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Hold-up Time
• Suppose the rectifier output is normally Vo and the dc load can operate
successfully with voltage as low as Vo1 .
• Let THU be the hold-up time.
• As C discharges and Vo falls, Io increases so difficult to use
i = Cdv/dt. Can use an energy approach instead:
• E = Pt
• Which leads to:
0.5C(Vo2 − Vo12 ) = Po THU
• Or
C(Vo2 − Vo12 )
THU =
2Po
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Hold-up Time Example
If the previous rectifier uses C =250 µF, Vs =230 V, and Vo1 = 230 V. For a load of 100 W,
what is the hold-up time?
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The Chopper
• Convert DC to DC, especially where the DC needs to be controlled.
• E.g. Battery operated vehicles, trains etc.
The
DC Input Chopper
From rectifer, Chopper DC Output Load
battery etc
Control and Feedback
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Chopper With Resistive Load
• Vo can only take values of 0 or Vdc .
vo
+ Vs
Vdc vo (1) on-time Ton
+ - (2) off-time Toff
- (3) period T = Ton + Toff
S (1) (2) t
(3)
Ton
• Duty Cycle, D =
T
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Chopper Average Voltage
• Let Vo = avg(vo ), then Vo = DVdc
Vo/Vdc
1
D
1
• Problem: if load is inductive, S will be destroyed when it opens.
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Chopper With Inductive Load
io
• Need to modify circuit so that: L
Df vo
◦ vo goes to zero when S turns off
Vdc R
◦ io is not suddenly interrupted +
-
• The solution is a freewheel diode Df . S
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Freewheel Diode Operation
• io is almost constant because of L
• S on: io flows through S, Vo = Vdc
• S off: io flows through Df , Vo = 0
• Hence, the relationship Vo = DVdc still holds.
io
t
S on S off S on S off
Df reversed-biased
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Freewheel Diode Operation
• Voltage seen by RL has a dc component.
• By Superposition, Io = Vo /R
• Since the average voltage across RL is the same as across just R, the
average voltage across L is zero.
• This also follows from L being a short circuit under dc conditions.
• If S switches at a high enough frequency then io ≈ constant
• This is usually assumed in the analysis of chopper circuits.
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Inverter
• Convert DC to AC with control over voltage and frequency.
• e.g.: ac motor drives, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS).
vo
S1 S2
Vdc
vo
+ io
-
S3 S4
left S1 S3
right S4 S2
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Inverter With RL Load
• The freewheeling diode is utilised once again.
S1, S4 on vo
io
S1 D1 D2 S2
Vdc vo
+ io
- S2, S3 on
S3 D3 D4 S4 left D1 S1 D3 S3
right D4 S4 D2 S2
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Inverter Current Paths
+ +
- -
D1, D4 on S1, S4 on
Power fed back to supply Power taken from supply
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Control of Voltage-Sinusoidal PWM (SPWM)
• The sinusoidal reference waveform is divided into several sections.
• Each section is approximated by a pulse having the same area.
reference sinewave
identical areas
inverter output
one switching
period of inverter
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SPWM - Spectrum
ectrum
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0 2mf 4mf 6mf 8mf 10mf
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Inverter Filtering
SPWM
inverter XL1
dc load
supply XC XL2
connection
• High quality outputs can be obtained from fixed frequency inverters (e.g.
UPS, remote PV generators) by addition of filter at output.
• Series inductor L1 to decouple HF harmonics in inverter from load.
• Shunt capacitor C to bypass harmonic current around load. C and L1
act as a low pass 2nd order filter using voltage divider action.
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