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TRENDS IN POWER ELECTRONICS AND DRIVES Dr.V.Kamaraj Professor Electrical and Electronics Engineering SSN College of Engineering Page: 1 Introduction “Nearly 65% of the total electric energy produced in the USA is consumed by electric motors.” - R. Krishnan, “Electric Motor Drives Modeling, Analysis, and Control” Prentice Hall,Inc.,2001 Page: 2 Some Applications of Electric Drives Hard Disk Drive, Treadmill, Air conditioner Pumps, fans, compressors Spindles and servos Appliances and power tools Cement kilns Paper and pulp mills; textile mills Automotive applications Conveyors, elevators, escalators, lifts Page: 3 Drive System Four distinct elements of a drive system are : 1. The load 2. The motor 3. The Power Electronic Converter 4. The Control Electronics Drive system development challenges: 1. Power Density 2. Performance 3. Energy Efficiency 4. Cost 5. Time to Market Page: 4 DRIVE SYSTEM TECHNOLOGIES I CONTROL ELECTRONICS II SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES TECHNOLOGY III MATERIAL TECHNOLOGY IV CAD TECHNOLOGY Page: 5 I CONTROL ELECTRONICS Functions to be implemented by Control Electronics Monitoring and Diagnostics Communication Real Interfaces time PWM Control Sensing Page: 6 Need for a Controller Page: 7 System with Controller Page: 8 Analog Controllers Advantages: 1.Low cost if the controller is simple 2.Easy Interpretation Disadvantages 1.Reconfigurability of the control is not possible without changing the hardware 2.Number of passive components used are more 3.More sensitive to variation in temperature 4.Reliability is low Page: 9 Digital controllers using DSP and Microcontrollers Advantages: 1.Reconfigurability of the control without changing the hardware 2.Less passive components are used 3.Less sensitive to temperature variations Disadvantages: 1.The hardware resources are fixed and it cannot be changed once the particular DSP/Microcontroller is selected 2.Design depends more on the hardware architecture of the processor Page: 10 FPGA Based Digital Controllers Advantages: 1.Reconfiguarabilty of the hardware 2.The user is independent of the architecture of the device These two advantages makes Digital Controllers with FPGA a better choice Page: 11 Configuration of Cyclone FPGA Page: 12 CONTROLLERS USING POWER INTEGRATED CIRCUITS PWM CURRENT REGULATING FECILITY DECODING HALL COMMUTATION LOGIC SENSOR PROTECTIVE FEATURES LM621,MC33034 Page: 13 II SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES TECHNOLOGY SEMICODUCTOR DEVICES ENHANCES • PERFORMANCE • RELIABILITY • COST EFFECTIVENESS OF DRIVE SYSTEM Page: 14 SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE TECHNOLOGY CHALLENGES TERMINAL CHARACTERISTICS MATERIAL PARAMETERS AND AMBIENT CONDITIONS DC I-V GEOMETRY AC STEADY STATE i,v ENERGYGAP TRANSIENT i,v DOPING MOBILITY LIFETIME DIELECTRIC CONSTANT TEMPARATURE ILLUMINATION Page: 15 ATLAS ATLAS enables device technology engineers to simulate the electrical, optical, and thermal behavior of semiconductor devices. ATLAS provides a physics-based, easy to use, modular, and extensible platform to analyze DC, AC, and time domain responses for all semiconductor based technologies in 2 and 3 dimensions. Page: 16 TECHNOLOGY ENERGY/MATERIAL/INFORMATION PROCESSING CONDITIONS PRECISE CONTROL • HIGH PERFORMANCE PRODUCT • HIGH RELIABILITY • LOW COST Page: 17 POWER SEMICCONDUCTOR DEVICES PWM SWITCHING FREQUENCIES ABOVE THE AUDIBLE FREQUENCIES CONVERTER EFFICIENCY AND RELIABILITY IGBT DEMISE OF GTO’S AND SCR’S SILICON CARBIDE TECHNOLOGIES Page: 18 III NEW MAGNETIC MATERIALS SMC (Somaloy500) Material Properties Physical Mechanical Compressive Strength 340 Mpa Fatigue Strength 23 Mpa Young’s modulus 117 Gpa Poisson’s Ratio 0.18 Impact Energy 1J Damping Factor (1/Q) Density 7.37 g/cm3 Specific heat 450 J/kg*K Thermal expansion 11E-6 m/m*K Resistivity 70 uΩ*m Magnetic 1.1E-3 Page: 19 B@4000A/m 1.26 T B@10000A/m 1.51 T Hc 270 A/m Soft Magnetic Composite (SMC) Soft Magnetic Composites (SMC) are composed of surface-insulated iron powder particles. SMC can be compressed to form uniform isotropic components with complex shapes in a single step. SMC makes it possible to define a magnetic field in three dimensions, thereby permitting the designer to build an electric motor beyond the restrictions set by the traditional lamination technology. Electrically Insulated Fe-powder Particles Typical SMC micro-structure Page: 20 SMC Parts Manufacturing Page: 21 Soft Magnetic Composite (SMC) Magnetic Property Technology improvement narrows the gap between steel and SMC. Page: 22 Advantages Reduced eddy current loss Increased efficiency Reduction in materials Potential for reduced air gap length as a result of the tight tolerances maintained in manufacturing SMC material Potential elimination of the ground wall insulation since the SMC stator itself acts as an insulator Reduced conducted EMI when machine is used with inverter supplies since the stator SMC body acts as an insulator and does not conduct current to ground, Reduced bearing currents in the presence of PWM waveforms again because of the use of SMC which acts as insulation against this type of current flow, Modular construction allows the possibility of easy removal of an individual modular unit for quick repair or replacement, Stator is easily recyclable since the stator can again be compressed back into powered form with pressure and the copper windings readily removed. Page: 23 Disadvantages Relatively high hysterisis loss (low frequency loss), Slight penalty a result of smaller saturation flux density, Relatively brittle material, Lower relative permeability (700 vs roughly 3000) Page: 24 IV CAD TECHNOLOGY Computer Aided Design is the technology concerned with the use of computer systems in the » » » » CREATION MODIFICATION ANALYSIS OPTIMIZATION OBJECTIVES » Improve the performance » Improve the power density » Improve the reliability Page: 25 CAD ADVANTAGES 1. CAD methods doesn't require assumed flux paths or Empirical factor 2. Complex geometries can be designed 3. Design improvement is possible in the design stage itself. 4. Weight of the material can be greatly minimized. 5. Design validation without resorting to expensive field tests. Page: 26 CAD PACKAGES ORGANIZTION OF A CAD PACKAGE Three identifiable Modules 1. Preprocessor 2 Solver 3. Post Processor Page: 28 PRE-PROCESSING Modeling Mesh Generation Material Properties Specification Boundary Condition Application Excitation Model Validation Page: 29 POST PROCESSING Flux plots Numerical values Animation Page: 30 MagNet MagNet gives complete and accurate electromagnetic field simulations. Engineers can design, analyze and optimize motors transformers actuators or any electric or electromechanical components regardless of how complex. Page: 31 MAXWELL Ansoft offers the Maxwell SV to help engineering students visualize electromagnetic fields and broaden their understanding of electromagnetic physics. The Maxwell SV is a subset of Ansoft's commercially distributed Maxwell 2D. Students can perform AC/DC electromagnetic and electrostaticfield simulation without limitation Page: 32 ANSYS ANSYS Emag software addresses the analysis needs of the low-frequency electromagnetics industry, including electric motors, relays, solenoids, toroids, induction heating, accelerators,medical instruments and magnet design. Page: 33 CAD OF SWITCHED RELUCTANCE MACHINE Page: 34 Torque Ripple Page: 35 Proposed Method to Reduce Torque Ripple Page: 36 Acoustic Noise Source of the Problem Page: 37 Effect of Skewing on Acoustic Noise Geometry Displacement in μm Stress Kg/m2 Standard Structure 0.589 Max:31.477 Min :0.233 Skewed rotor structure 0.624 Max:59.845 Min :0.134 Page: 38 A Method to Reduce Acoustic Noise POWDER MIX COMPACTION CURING OR HEAT TREATMENT NET SHAPE Page: 39 Future Scenario Technology advancement, cost and size reduction are promoting extensive application of drive system in residential, Industrial and Transportation Systems Boost in global industrial automation Higher cost of energy and environmental regulation will promote energy saving by Power Electronics Wide growth of environmentally clean wind and PV Energy Wide growth of Electric and Hybrid Vehicles as fuel cost increases Power Electronics will be a key technology like computers Page: 40 REFERENCES M. Balaji, S. Ramkumar and V. Kamaraj "Performance evaluation of switched reluctance machine using finite element analysis" Proceedings of the 2nd National Conference on Cutting Edge Technologies In Power Conversion And Industrial Drives, Sathyamangalam, India, 24 - 25 March, 2006, Paper No. PE72. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Shape optimization of switched reluctance machine for aerospace applications" Proceedings of IECON '05, the 31st Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society, Raleigh, NC, USA, 6 - 10 November, 2005, pp 1748 - 1751. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Optimum pole arcs for switched reluctance machine with reduced ripple" Proceedings of PEDS '05, the 6th IEEE International Conference on Power Electronics and Drive Systems, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 28 November - 1 December, 2005, Vol. 1, pp 761 - 764. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Minimization of torque ripple in switched reluctance machine for direct drive applications" Proceedings of IEEE Symposium on Emerging Technologies, Islamabad, Pakistan, 17 - 18 September, 2005, pp 388 - 392. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Modeling and design of shape optimized SRM with reduced ripple" Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium on Emerging Technologies, Islamabad, Pakistan, 17 - 18 September, 2005, pp 399 - 404. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Optimal design of switched reluctance machine" Proceedings of ROVISP '05, International Conference on Robotics, Vision, Information and Signal Processing, Penang, Malaysia, 20 - 22 July, 2005, Paper No. B3-5. Page: 41 References R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Optimal design of switched reluctance machine using genetic algorithm" Proceedings of EDPE 2005, International Conference on Electrical Drives and Power Electronics, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 26 - 28 September, 2005, Paper No. E05-11. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Optimal design of switched reluctance machine using genetic algorithm" Proceedings of AEE '05, the WEAS 4th International Conference on Applications of Electrical Engineering, Prague, Czech Republic, , 2005. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "Torque ripple minimization of switched reluctance machine (3 phase) using genetic algorithm" Proceedings of SOSM 2005, the 15th International Conference on Soft Computing, Optimization, Simulation and Manufacturing Systems, Cancun, Mexico, , 2005. R.T. Naayagi and V. Kamaraj "A comparative study of shape optimization of SRM using genetic algorithm and simulated annealing" Proceedings of INDICON 2005, IEEE India Annual Conference, Chennai, India, 11 - 13 December, 2005, pp 596 - 599. M. Balaji, C.A. Vaithilingam and V. Kamaraj "Torque ripple minimization in switched reluctance motor drives" Proceedings of PEMD '04, the 2nd International Conference on Power Electronics, Machines and Drives, Edinburgh, UK, 31 March - 2 April, 2004, Vol. 1, pp 104 - 107. K. Sivaprasad, P. Naveenkumar, M. Balaji and V. Kamaraj "Performance prediction of switched reluctance machine using multilevel simulation" Proceedings of EPE-PEMC 2004, the 11th International Power Electronics and Motion Control Conference, Riga, Latvia, 2 - 4 September, 2004, CDROM Paper No. A52627. V. Kamaraj and C.A. Vaithilingam "Modeling and simulation of switched reluctance machine (SRM) using MagNet6.0" Proceedings of PEDS '03, the 5th IEEE International Conference on Power Electronics and Drive Systems, Singapore, 17 - 20 November, 2003, Vol. 1, pp 480 - 484. Page: 42