POWER CONVERTER
20220209680 ยท 2022-06-30
Inventors
- Ignacio Castro (Gijon, ES)
- Tania CUESTA CANO (Oviedo, ES)
- Diego GONZALEZ LAMAR (Gijon, ES)
- Alberto RODRIGUEZ ALONSO (Gijon, ES)
Cpc classification
H02K2213/12
ELECTRICITY
H02M7/49
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/325
ELECTRICITY
H02M7/4835
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A modular electric power converter includes a plurality of power converter modules, each module comprising a cell of a Modular Multilevel Converter, MMC, to provide a controlled ac output.
Claims
1. An electric power converter comprising: a plurality of power converter modules, wherein each module includes: an ac-dc rectifier providing a dc output; and a cell of a Modular Multilevel Converter (MMC) connected to the dc output to provide a controlled ac output and a controlled dc output.
2. The electric power converter of claim 1, further comprising a dc-link capacitor connected across the output of the ac-dc rectifier.
3. The electric power converter of claim 1, wherein the plurality of power converter modules together further provide a dc bus.
4. A power converter system comprising: a multi-phase generator having a plurality of multi-phase windings; and an electric power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein each winding has an associated power converter module connected thereto, each power converter module arranged to provide the controlled ac output at a respective selected voltage and frequency.
5. The power converter system of claim 4, wherein the windings are three-phase windings.
6. The power converter system of claim 4, further comprising: a power chain for each phase, each power chain comprising a power converter module for each winding.
7. The power converter system of claim 4, wherein the electric power converter provides a dc output, and the system further comprising: a battery connected across the dc output.
8. The power converter system of claim 4, wherein each winding has two associated power converter modules connected thereto.
9. The power converter system of claim 8, wherein the system is configured to reconfigure in response to failure of a power converter module.
10. The power converter system of claim 7, wherein the system is configured to reconfigure in response to failure of the battery.
11. The power converter system of claim 6, wherein the system is configured to reconfigure in response to failure of a power chain.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] Electrical generators in e.g., aircraft prolusion systems, as seen in
[0027] Another approach (not shown) uses a matrix converter but such converter designs require complex additional stages if a battery is to be included.
[0028] The design of the present disclosure integrates a Modular Multilevel Converter (MMC) cell within the ac-dc converter in a multi-phase generator system, performing back-to-back operation while also enabling the integration of a battery within the system.
[0029] The arrangement of the disclosure uses a multi-winding ac generator 12 having multiple three-phase windings 201-20n. A power converter 11 is connected to the generator 12. The windings in the example are three-phase, but other phases e.g. six, nine, etc. may also be used. The power converter 11 has positive and negative dc output terminals 8, 9 and ac phase outputs 7a, 7b, 7n (where n is the total number of phases).
[0030] As seen in
[0031] According to this disclosure, the power converter has a modular structure wherein each power chain 6 includes a power converter module 4 for each winding of the generator 12. With reference to
[0032]
[0033] As can best be seen in
[0034] Because each module has a capacitor, the dc voltage is distributed between several smaller capacitors rather than requiring one large capacitor. This can reduce the overall weight of the system. An aim is to minimise the dc-link capacitor of each cell, as this can improve power density/reduce overall weight, the importance of which is mentioned above. If a battery is connected to the dc-side of the module, however, the capacitor 2 can be eliminated.
[0035] Using the modular structure with MMC cells integrated with the ac-dc rectifiers, different dc outputs can be provided as well as ac/HVAC outputs.
[0036] Further, the design of the disclosure can include additional modules at each stage to provide redundancy. Such a design is fault tolerant in that the cell topology can be rearranged to handle both HVAC and HVDC failures as is known for MMC cells.
[0037] If one of the power converter modules (13 in
[0038] The design of this disclosure also simplifies the addition of a battery 14 to the dc-link. A battery 14 is connected between the dc outputs 8, 9 as shown in
[0039] It is also conceivable for the system to be designed without the additional components that provide redundancy/fault tolerance, although reliability is then reduced.
[0040] The use of a multi-winding generator 12 allows the output power to be split into independent systems, each having a modular power converter stage which can be weighted and controlled differently to provide different outputs. Such a modular design is simpler than know serial/parallel configurations. The modular design of the disclosure is also advantageous in that it can provide both ac and dc outputs.
[0041] The modular structure of the disclosure also allows for redundancy and/or reconfigurability.
[0042] Another advantage of the MMC/modular design is that fewer windings could be used and, instead, the MMC cells could be multilevel cells. The design could also have a hybrid MMC in that some of the module cells are supplied by the generator while others are supplied by another power source.
[0043] In the event of failures in different parts of the system, the system can be reconfigured to mitigate failure.