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Transcript
Visual ModelQ Training Voltage regeneration in servo systems This unit discusses • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. What voltage regeneration is. How to model a servo system during regeneration What is voltage regeneration? • In servo systems, when a motor decelerates under power, the motor operates in “generator” mode, feeding energy back to the drive. • Standard servo drives use diodes to feed line power into the bus, and those diodes block the energy from returning to the AC line. The result is that the mechanical (kinetic) energy feeds into the bus capacitor and is converted to potential energy, raising the bus voltage. • If this process continues uncontrolled, the voltage can elevate to levels high enough to cause catastrophic failure. © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. **This unit can be completed with a free (unregistered) copy of Visual ModelQ What is voltage regeneration (cont.)? • The most common solution is to use a transistor to temporarily connect a high-power resistor across the line to burn the energy as heat (I2R) losses. • Many servo drives include a regen resistor that can dissipate the regen power for most applications. • For systems with larger amounts of regenerative energy, an external resistor is added in parallel to the internal resistor. The external resistor is usually larger and dissipates a greater amount of power. • Most drives monitor the bus voltage and shut down the drive when this voltage reaches an upper limit. This protects the drive when the regen circuit cannot hold the bus down. © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. **This unit can be completed with a free (unregistered) copy of Visual ModelQ Install Visual ModelQ To run Visual ModelQ the first time: © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. • • • • Click here to visit www.QxDesign.com Download Visual ModelQ** Run Visual ModelQ installation Launch Visual ModelQ using the Windows start button or clicking on the icon • The “default model” should appear **This unit can be completed with a free (unregistered) copy of Visual ModelQ Load the model “Regen Voltage” • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Visit www.QxDesign.com/VisualModelQ#Training Download “Regen Voltage.mqd” Review the model • The next several slides will review the model for regenerative voltage section-by-section: – – – – – – – – – – – © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Start with a standard servo system. Calculate the mechanical power. Deduct a constant power drain to represent system losses. Divide the power entering the bus capacitor by the bus voltage to calculate current feeding the bus capacitor. Deduct the current flowing through the regen resistors from the current feeding the bus capacitor. Integrate the current in the bus capacitor to derive the bus voltage. The integrator should never fall below the line voltage; the line voltage acts like a lower limit on the integrator, holding the bus voltage from falling below that value. Monitor the voltage for a fault condition (> 390V). Use a hysteresis block to control the regen transistor (330V to 360V). Connect the bus voltage across the regen resistors when the hysteresis block is on. Calculate the current flowing through the regen resistors due to the bus voltage using Ohm’s law. Monitor bus voltage, regen current, and regen power. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. The top portion is a standard servo control system. Torque and Velocity “extenders” carry those signals to the regen circuit. Review the model • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Mechanical power is formed as Velocity x Torque Multiply by -1 to calculate power from the motor to the bus Review the model • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Add a constant power loss as a simple approximation In practical systems, the power loss formula is more complex Review the model • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Divide the output power by the bus voltage; this forms current This step converts mechanical power to electrical power Review the model • • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Subtract the current flowing through the regen resistors We will discuss to how this current is calculated later Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Divide by capacitance to calculate the integration rate in the bus capacitor Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Integrate the cap voltage using a clamped integrator with a lower limit of 300V, the DC bus. The cap will not discharge below this. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Monitor the bus voltage. If it goes above the upper limit (400V) show a message indicating a fault. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Use a hysteresis block to control the regen transistor. Turn on when bus > 360 and off when bus < 330. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Use an analog switch as a simple model for a transistor. When hysteresis controller is on, connect bus to regen resistors. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Calculate current from internal regen resistor (80 ohm). Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Calculate current from external regen resistor (10 ohm). Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Sum regen resistor currents and subtract from capacitor current. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Monitor RMS regen current and RMS regen voltage. Note the RMS voltage across the resistor is not equal to the bus voltage. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Calculate and monitor average power Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Also, monitor average voltage on a dial meter. Review the model • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Finally, monitor cap voltage (above) and against velocity. Trigger with Vc (left of scope) to sync with upper scope. Review the results • During decel, the bus voltage (blue) grows until it reaches 360V; then the regen circuit turns on until bus voltage falls below 330V. 360V 330V 300V © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Review the results • © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. In this snapshot, VBus = 343V, regen power = 489W, RMS external regen current = 15.6A, & RMS resistor voltage = 156V. Visit www.QxDesign.com for information about software and practical books on controls. Click here for information on Control System Design Guide (2nd Ed.), published by Academic Press in 2000 © 2002 QxDesign, Inc. Click here for information on Visual ModelQ Click here for information on Observers in Control Systems, published by Academic Press in 2002