Chap005 ch5 Solution of Power Electronics by Daniel W
Chap005 ch5 Solution of Power Electronics by Daniel W
Chap005 ch5 Solution of Power Electronics by Daniel W
CHAPTER 5 SOLUTIONS
3/9/10
5-1)
Vm sin(2 ) sin(2 )
a) Vo ,rms 1 Vrms 1
2 2 2
V 431
Vm 480 2 60 Vo, rms 431 V ; I o,rms o ,rms 8.61 A
R 50
Vo2,rms 4312
b) P 3708 W
R 50
P P 3708
c) pf 0.897
S Vrms I rms 480 8.61
Vm 480 2
d ) I avg , SCR 1 cos 1 cos 60 3.24 A
2 R 2 50
I o, rms 8.61
I rms , SCR 6.1 A
2 2
480
e) I1, rms 0.84 8.0 A
50
2
I rms I1,2rms 8.612 8.02
THDI 0.38 38%
I1, rms 8.0
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5-2)
Vm sin(2 ) sin(2 )
a) Vo, rms 1 Vrms 1
2 2 2
V 114.4
Vm 120 2 45 Vo, rms 114.4 V ; I o, rms o, rms 5.72 A
R 20
V2 114.42
b) P o, rms 655 W
R 20
P P 655
c) pf 0.953
S Vrms I rms 120 5.72
Vm 120 2
d ) I avg , SCR 1 cos 1 cos 45 2.30 A
2 R 2 20
I o, rms 5.72
I rms , SCR 4.05 A
2 2
120
e) I1, rms 0.92 5.53 A
20
2
I rms I1,2rms 5.722 5.532
THDI 0.26 26%
I1,rms 5.53
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5-3)
V2
P o.rms Vo.rms PR 800 35 167.3 V
R
167.3
from Fig . 5.2, 0.7 92
240
V 167.3
I o, rms o ,rms 4.78 A
R 35
I o, rms 4.78
I SCR ,rms 3.38 A
2 2
P 800
pf 0.70 70%
S 120 4.78
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5-4)
120
With the 240-Vsource, Vo ,rms 120V ; 0.5 ; a 115 from Fig.5.2
240
sin(2 )
or solving Eq.5-3, 120 240 1 0 1.99 rad 114
2
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5-5)
For P 200W , Vo ,rms PR 200 40 89.4 V
sin(2 )
89.4 120 1 0 1.48 rad 85
2
P P 200
pf 0.75 75%.
S Vrms I rms 120 89.4 / 40
1202
The maximum power available is 360 W. The pf is 1.0 for 360 W.
40
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5-6)
Using the circuit of Fig. 5-1a,
sin(2 )
154.9 240 1 0 1.703 rad 97.6
2
sin(2 )
219 240 1 0 0.986 rad 56.5
2
Io 219 / 32
Maximum SCR currents are for 1500 W: I SCR ,rms 4.84 A
2 2
Vm 2 240
I SRC , avg
2 R
1 cos
2 32
1 cos 56.5 2.62 A
Vmax 2(240) 340 V
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5-7)
sin(2 )
154.9 240 1 0 1.703 rad 97.6
2
sin(2 )
219 240 1 0 0.986 rad 56.5
2
Io 154.9 / 20
Maximum SCR currents are for R = 20 : I SCR ,rms 5.48 A
2 2
Vm 2 240
I SRC , avg
2 R
1 cos
2 20
1 cos 97.6 2.34 A
Vmax 2(240) 340 V
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5-8)
V 2 1202
R 144
P 100
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1 sin 2
2
1 2
Vo, rms V m sin t d t Vm
2
2 4 8
Vm sin 2
1
2 2 4
Vm V
0 Vo ,rms m
2 2
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5-10)
vo (t ) Vm sin t for 1 t and for 2 t 2
1
2
2 2
Vo.rms Vm sin t d t Vm sin t d t
2
1 2
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4.87
c) I rms , SCR 3.44 A
2
2
2
d ) P I rms R 4.87 18 427 W
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4.18
c) I rms , SCR 2.95 A
2
2
2
d ) P I rms R 4.18 22 384 W
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PSpice: P = AVG(W(R)) in Probe gives 523 W (read at the end of the trace). The difference
between PSpice and the theoretical output is because of the nonideal SCR model in PSpice. The
PSpice result will be more realistic. The THD is 22.4% from the PSpice output file using Fourier
terms through n = 9.
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5-15) Use the PSpice circuit of Example 5-3. The .STEP PARAM command is quite useful for
determining α. (a) α ≈ 81° for 400 W. (b) α ≈ 46° for 700 W.
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5-16) Modify the PSpice circuit file of Example 5-3. Use the .STEP PARAM command (see Prob. 5-15)
for determining α. (a) α ≈ 80° for 600 W. (b) α ≈ 57° for 1000 W.
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5-17) The single-phase voltage controller of Fig. 5-4a is suitable for this application. Equation (5-9)
applies for each half-period of the input sine wave. For 250 W delivered to the load, each half period
must deliver 125 W. Therefore, the rms value of the current in Eq. (5-9) must be 2.28 A, found by using
I2R = 125. A closed-form solution is not possible, but trial-and-error numerical techniques give α ≈ 74°. A
similar but perhaps easier method is to use PSpice simulations using the PSpice A/D circuit file in
Example 5-3. Modifying the diode model to .MODEL DMOD D(n=.01) to represent an ideal diode, and
with trial-and-error values of α, gives α ≈ 74°.
The average and rms currents are determined from a numerical integration of the current expression from
Eq. (5-9) or from a PSpice simulation. ISCR,avg = 1.3 A, ISCR,rms = 2.3 A. The maximum voltage across the
switches is 120√2sin(74°) = 163 V.
5-18) The PSpice circuit file is shown below. The total average load power is three times the power in
one of the phase resistors. Enter 3*AVG(W(RA)) in Probe. The results are (a) 6.45 kW for 20°, (b) 2.79
kW for 80°, and (c) 433 W for 115°. Note that the .STEP PARAM command can be used to run the three
simulations at once.
S3 2 10 20 0 SMOD ; B-phase
D3 10 5 DMOD
S6 5 11 21 0 SMOD
D6 11 2 DMOD
S5 3 12 22 0 SMOD ; C-phase
D5 12 6 DMOD
S2 6 13 23 0 SMOD
D2 13 3 DMOD
***************************** LOAD **********************************
RA 4 4A {R} ; van = v(4,7)
LA 4A 7 {L}
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5-19) The PSpice input file from Example 5-4 is used for this simulation. In Probe, enter the expression
3*AVG(W(RA)) to get the total three-phase average power in the load, resulting in 368 W. Switch S 1
conducts when the current in phase A is positive, and S4 conducts when the current is negative.
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5-20) The smallest value of α is 120°. The conduction angel must be less than for equal to 60°. The
extinction angle is 180°, so α is 120° or greater.
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5-21)
THREE-PHASE VOLTAGE CONTROLLER -- R-L LOAD
*MODIFIED FOR A DELTA-CONNECTED LOAD
*SOURCE IS Y-CONNECTED (UNGROUNDED)
********************** INPUT PARAMETERS ****************************
.PARAM Vs=480 ; rms line-to-line voltage
.PARAM ALPHA=45 ; delay angle in degrees
.PARAM R=25 ; load resistance (y-connected)
.PARAM L = 1p ; load inductance
.PARAM F=60 ; source frequency
********************** COMPUTED PARAMETERS **************************
.PARAM Vm={Vs*SQRT(2)/SQRT(3)} ; convert to peak line-neutral volts
.PARAM DLAY={1/(6*F)} ; switching interval is 1/6 period
.PARAM PW={.5/F} TALPHA={ALPHA/(F*360)}
.PARAM TRF=10US ; rise and fall time for pulse switch control
*********************** THREE-PHASE SOURCE **************************
VAN 1 0 SIN(0 {VM} 60)
VBN 2 0 SIN(0 {VM} 60 0 0 -120)
VCN 3 0 SIN(0 {VM} 60 0 0 -240)
***************************** SWITCHES ********************************
S1 1 8 18 0 SMOD ; A-phase
D1 8 4 DMOD
S4 4 9 19 0 SMOD
D4 9 1 DMOD
S3 2 10 20 0 SMOD ; B-phase
D3 10 5 DMOD
S6 5 11 21 0 SMOD
D6 11 2 DMOD
S5 3 12 22 0 SMOD ; C-phase
D5 12 6 DMOD
S2 6 13 23 0 SMOD
D2 13 3 DMOD
***************************** LOAD **********************************
RA 4 4A {R} ;
LA 4A 2 {L}
RB 5 5A {R} ;
LB 5A 3 {L}
RC 6 6A {R} ;
LC 6A 1 {L}
************************* SWITCH CONTROL *****************************
V1 18 0 PULSE(-10 10 {TALPHA} {TRF} {TRF} {PW} {1/F})
40A
Ia
0A
SEL>>
-40A
I(RA)
50A
Source A current
0A
-50A
15ms 20ms 25ms 30ms 35ms 40ms 45ms 50ms
- I(VAN)
Time
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5-22) The PSpice circuit file modification must include a very large resistor (e.g., one megaohm)
connected between the neutral of the load to ground to prevent a “floating node” error because of the
series capacitor. The steady-state phase A current has two pulses for each of the switches, assuming that
the gate signal to the SCRs is continuously applied during the conduction interval. The rms current is
approximately 5.52 A. The total average power for all three phases is approximately 1.28 kW. The THD
for the load current is computed as 140% for harmonics through n = 9 in the .FOUR command. However,
the current waveform is rich in higher-order harmonics and the THD is approximately 300% for n = 100.
It should be noted that this load is not conducive for use with the voltage controller because the load
voltage will get extremely large (over 5 kV) because of stored charge on the capacitor.
40A
S1 S1
(1.0000,5.5229)
0A
Phase A current
SEL>> S4 S4
-40A
I(RA) RMS(I(RA))
2.0KW
(1.0000,1.2811K)
1.0KW
0W
0.980s 0.984s 0.988s 0.992s 0.996s 1.000s
AVG(W(RA))*3
Time
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5-23) With the S1-S4 switch path open, the equivalent circuit is as shown. The current in phase A is zero,
so the voltage across the phase-A resistor is zero. The voltage at the negative of V 14 is then Vn, and the
voltage at the positive of V14 is Va. The voltage across the phase B resistor is half of the voltage from
phase B to phase C, resulting in
Vb Vc Vb Vc
Vn Vb
2 2
Therefore,
Vb Vc
V14 Va Vn Va
2