METHOD OF CLAMPING OUTPUT CURRENT OF THREE-PHASE POWER CONVERTER

20230223866 · 2023-07-13

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method of clamping an output current of a three-phase power converter is provided. The three-phase power converter includes three switching bridge arms and provides a three-phase output voltage command, and each switching bridge arm has an upper switch and a lower switch connected in series. The method includes steps of: determining that the output current is greater than a first current threshold to activate a current clamping control procedure, comparing a carrier signal with the three-phase output voltage command to turn on the lower switches by a first zero vector when the carrier signal is rising and turn on the upper switches by a second zero vector when the carrier signal is falling, determining that the output current is greater than a second current threshold to activate an overcurrent protection procedure, wherein the second current threshold is greater than the first current threshold.

    Claims

    1. A method of clamping an output current of a three-phase power converter, the three-phase power converter comprising three switching bridge arms and configured to provide a three-phase output voltage command, and each switching bridge arm comprising an upper switch and a lower switch connected in series, the method comprising steps of: (a) determining that the output current is greater than a first current threshold to activate a current clamping control procedure, (b) comparing a carrier signal with the three-phase output voltage command to turn on the lower switches by a first zero vector when the carrier signal is rising and turn on the upper switches by a second zero vector when the carrier signal is falling, and (c) determining that the output current is greater than a second current threshold to activate an overcurrent protection procedure, wherein the second current threshold is greater than the first current threshold.

    2. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein in step (b), when the carrier signal reaches to a peak value, the first zero vector turns on the lower switches; when the carrier signal reaches to a valley value, the second zero vector turns on the upper switches.

    3. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein in step (c), the overcurrent protection procedure is performed by turning off all of the upper switches and all of the lower switches of the three switching bridge arms.

    4. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein when the current clamping control procedure is performing, two different active vectors are provided between the first zero vector and the second zero vector.

    5. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first zero vector is a vector used to control all of the lower switches of the three switching bridge arms to be turned on, and the second zero vector is a vector used to control all of the upper switches of the three switching bridge arms to be turned on.

    6. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, wherein in step (b), when the carrier signal reaches to a peak value or a valley value, the current clamping control procedure is interrupted.

    7. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 6, wherein in step (b), when the carrier signal reaches to the peak value to interrupt the current clamping control procedure, the first zero vector subsequently turns on the lower switches; when the carrier signal reaches to the valley value to interrupt the current clamping control procedure, the second zero vector subsequently turns on the upper switches.

    8. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a step between step (b) and step (c) of: (d) determining that the output current is greater than a third current threshold to activate a second current clamping control procedure, wherein the third current threshold is greater than the first current threshold and less than the second current threshold.

    9. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 8, wherein when the second current clamping control procedure is performing, all of the upper switches and all of the lower switches of the three switching bridge arms are turned off.

    10. The method of clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter as claimed in claim 8, wherein the three-phase power converter is connected to a load, and the load is a generator or a motor operating in a generation mode.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

    [0022] The present disclosure can be more fully understood by reading the following specific description of the embodiment, with reference made to the accompanying drawing as follows:

    [0023] FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a systematic architecture of a related motor driver.

    [0024] FIG. 2 is a circuit diagram of a related three-phase power converter.

    [0025] FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a systematic architecture of the power converter to which a pulse width modulation is applied.

    [0026] FIG. 4 is a schematic waveform of switching the related power converter in a PWM manner.

    [0027] FIG. 5 is a schematic waveform of switching the related three-phase power converter in an SVPWM manner.

    [0028] FIG. 6 is a vector space diagram composed of voltage vectors under the related SVPWM switching manner.

    [0029] FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram of a current protection mechanism applied to the motor driver.

    [0030] FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram of a current clamping method.

    [0031] FIG. 9 is an equivalent circuit diagram of the three-phase power converter controlled by the current clamping method.

    [0032] FIG. 10 is a schematic diagram of turning off all switches of the power converter.

    [0033] FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram of controlling the switches of the power converter by zero vectors according to the present disclosure.

    [0034] FIG. 12A is a circuit diagram of the power converter switching to the zero vector according to a first embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0035] FIG. 12B is a circuit diagram of the power converter switching to the zero vector according to a second embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0036] FIG. 13 is a specific schematic diagram of controlling the switches of the power converter by zero vectors according to a first embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0037] FIG. 14 is an equivalent circuit diagram of controlling switches of the power converter by zero vectors according to the present disclosure.

    [0038] FIG. 15 is a specific schematic diagram of controlling switches of the power converter by zero vectors according to a second embodiment of the present disclosure.

    [0039] FIG. 16 is a flowchart of a method of clamping an output current of the three-phase power converter according to the present disclosure.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0040] Reference will now be made to the drawing figures to describe the present disclosure in detail. It will be understood that the drawing figures and exemplified embodiments of present disclosure are not limited to the details thereof.

    [0041] As mentioned above, in order to avoid components of the power converter from being damaged by overcurrent, an overcurrent protection mechanism is usually designed in a motor driving system. FIG. 7 shows a schematic diagram of a current protection mechanism applied to the motor driver 900. The motor driving system may use hardware or firmware detection to feedback phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w to determine current magnitudes. When any of the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w suddenly rises greater than an upper limit current value or exceeds an overcurrent protection command (that is, the determination in step S2 is “Yes”), the power converter 100 enters an overcurrent protection mode, in which all of the arm switches of the power converter 100 are turned off and the motor driving system stops operating.

    [0042] However, sometimes the motor load just encounters a sudden transient change, such as instant on-load, instant off-load, or controller glitch. After the sudden transient change is over, the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w can be stably outputted. Consequently, this overcurrent protection mechanism limits an operational flexibility of the power converter 100. In order to increase an operating range of the motor driver, the protection mechanism introduces a “current clamping control” to assist the power converter 100 to survive the overcurrent transient. That is to say, when any of the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is instantaneously greater than a clamping current value or exceeds a clamping current protection command (that is, the determination in step S1 is “Yes”), the overcurrent protection mechanism of the power converter 100 will not be immediately activated. In other words, when one of the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is less than the upper limit current value or does not exceed the overcurrent protection command (i.e., the determination in step S2 is “No”), the power converter 100 enters a current clamping control mode to suppress output current, so that all of the arm switches of power converter 100 will not be turned off to avoid system shutdown, which increases the operating range of the power converter 100 to survive certain transient states. However, if the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w are too high to be suppressed during the current clamping control mode, the system will still enter the overcurrent protection mode.

    [0043] Voltage commands and signals generated during the current clamping control mode are shown in FIG. 8. Three-phase voltage commands (or three-phase output voltage commands) in FIG. 8 are V.sub.ref_max, V.sub.ref_mid, V.sub.ref_min in an order of the maximum value, the middle value, and the minimum value, which are respectively compared with a triangle wave (carrier wave) to generate a PWM signal. Every switching cycle includes two active vectors v.sub.x, v.sub.y and two zero vectors zero vectors V.sub.0, v.sub.7. As shown in FIG. 7, when any of the phase output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the clamping current value (that is, the determination in step S1 is “Yes”), the system in the overcurrent protection mode generates a current clamping signal S.sub.CC to the controller. When the controller receives the current clamping signal S.sub.CC, such as flag signals indicated by arrows in FIG. 8, all of the switching signals immediately turns off gates of the arm switches (which is called “gate off state”). As shown in FIG. 10, when the first flag signal or the third flag signal is activated, the gate off state immediately effects on the active vector v.sub.x. If the flag signal (such as the second flag signal) appears in the gate off state, the gate off state remains.

    [0044] S.sub.INTR shown in FIG. 8 is an interruption signal of the controller, usually generated at the peak or valley of a switching cycle, and used to reset the flag signal of the current clamping signal S.sub.CC. When the controller receives the interruption signal S.sub.INTR, it will determine the output current again. If the controller determines that the magnitude of the output current is still greater than the clamping current value, the current clamping control mode is maintained to continuously suppress the output current. On the contrary, if the controller determines that the current magnitude has been less than the clamping current value (because of the suppression during the current clamping control mode), the interruption signal aborts current clamping at the peak or valley of a switching cycle to resume normal operation of PWM output, and an equivalent circuit at this time is shown in FIG. 9. If present current flows are i.sub.u<0, i.sub.v>0, i.sub.w>0, the output currents are discharged through the corresponding back-connected diodes (instead of the upper and lower switches) according to their current flows, so as to clamp the output currents. However, a wire-to-wire voltage across the motor side is influenced by the DC side voltage V.sub.dc, for example, if the wire-to-wire voltage jumps from +V.sub.dc to −V.sub.dc or from −V.sub.dc to +V.sub.dc, large current ripples on the output side current are induced to make the mechanical motor vibrate greatly.

    [0045] Moreover, by turning off all of the switches to achieve output current suppression, another phenomenon that will occur is that the output current (energy) is fed to the DC voltage side, which causes the DC side voltage rising to activate overvoltage protection.

    [0046] FIG. 16 shows a flowchart of a method of clamping an output current of the three-phase power converter according to the present disclosure. The three-phase power converter includes three switching bridge arms and provides a three-phase output voltage command, and each switching bridge arm includes an upper switch and a lower switch connected in series. The steps of the current clamping method are described in detail as follows.

    [0047] First, determining that the output current is greater than a first current threshold to activate a current clamping control procedure (step S11). As mentioned above, the current clamping control method induces a large overvoltage on the output side of the motor, which is prone to induce large ripples on the motor current and make the motor vibrate. Therefore, the method for clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter proposed by the present disclosure does not use the method of turning off all of the switches of the power converter (as shown in FIG. 10), but the switches of the power converter 100 are switched by the zero vector (as shown in FIG. 11). Specifically, as shown in FIG. 11, when the controller receives the first flag signal of the current clamping signal S.sub.CC, the upper and lower switches of the three-phase bridge arm are controlled by the first zero vector v.sub.0. That is, the first zero vector v.sub.0 controls all of the lower switches to be turned on and all of the upper switches to be turned off, but not all of the upper and lower switches are turned off. Similarly, when the controller receives the second flag signal of the current clamping signal S.sub.CC, all of the upper switches are turned on and all of the lower switches are turned off by the second zero vector v.sub.7. In particular, as shown in FIG. 13, when the carrier signal ramps up to the peak value, the current clamping control is interrupted, the lower switches are subsequently turned on by the first zero vector v.sub.0. When the carrier signal ramps down to the valley value, the current clamping control is interrupted, the upper switches are subsequently turned on by the second zero vector v.sub.7. Therefore, switching losses of the upper and lower switches can be reduced.

    [0048] In this condition, equivalent circuits for FIG. 13 are shown in FIG. 12A and FIG. 12B. FIG. 12A shows a circuit diagram of the power converter 100 switching to the second zero vector v.sub.7, and FIG. 12B shows a circuit diagram of the power converter 100 switching to the first zero vector v.sub.0. Since all of the upper switches are turned on to make the output currents flow inside of the power converter 100, the output currents can be suppressed; and all of the lower switches are turned off to avoid the output currents (energy) from flowing back to the DC voltage side. Meanwhile, when the controller switches to the zero vector v.sub.0, the wire-to-wire cross voltage at the motor 900 is zero, which significantly reduces ripples on the output current to significantly reduce vibration of the motor 900 under the current clamping control.

    [0049] Afterward, comparing the carrier signal with the three-phase output voltage command to turn on the lower switches by the first zero vector when the carrier signal is rising and turn on the upper switches by the second zero vector when the carrier signal is falling (step S12). The zero-vector switching method may be seen in FIG. 6, and there are two switching manners for: the (first) zero vector v.sub.0 and the (second) zero vector v.sub.7. As shown in FIG. 5, at the peak of the carrier wave is the zero vector v.sub.0, and at the valley of the carrier wave is the zero vector v.sub.7. Moreover, in order to reduce switching loss during the current clamping control, when the carrier signal is rising from the valley to the peak (that is, the rising interval), the controller selects the zero vector v.sub.0 in the current clamping control when receiving the first flag signal of the current clamping signal S.sub.CC. On the contrary, when the carrier signal is falling from the peak to the valley (that is, the falling interval), the controller selects the zero vector v.sub.7 in the current clamping control when receiving the second flag signal of the current clamping signal S.sub.CC.

    [0050] FIG. 13 shows a specific schematic diagram of controlling the switches of the power converter by the zero vectors according to a first embodiment of the present disclosure. The vector for switching the switches is determined by comparing the three-phase voltage commands (V.sub.ref_max, V.sub.ref_mid, V.sub.ref_min) with the carrier signal. In FIG. 13, The three-phase voltage commands are classified into a maximum value (V.sub.ref_max), a middle value (V.sub.ref mid), and a minimum value (V.sub.ref_min). When the current clamping signal S.sub.CC is detected, if the carrier signal is in the rising interval, all of the three-phase voltage commands are clamped to the minimum voltage value (V.sub.ref_min) to generate the zero vector v.sub.0. On the other hand, when the current clamping signal S.sub.CC is detected, if the carrier signal is in the falling interval, all three-phase voltage commands are clamped to the maximum voltage value (V.sub.ref_max) to generate the zero vector v.sub.7.

    [0051] As mentioned above, the method for clamping the output current of the three-phase power converter proposed by the present disclosure mainly uses the zero vectors instead of turning off all of the switches of the power converter so as to reduce ripples on the output currents. However, this method is only applicable when the motor operates in a “motor mode.” If the motor operates in a “generator mode,” using the zero-vector operation cannot reduce ripples on the output current. In this condition, it is still necessary to turn off all of the switches of the power converter so that the energy on the AC side is fed to a braking resistor R.sub.dc on the DC side for consumption, thereby reducing AC currents from the motor acting as a generator, as shown in FIG. 14.

    [0052] However, for a motor driver, it could be unknown whether the motor is currently operating in the “motor mode” or the “generator mode,” and therefore in the current clamping control, two current clamping signals, such as a first current clamping signal S.sub.CC1 and a second current clamping signal S.sub.CC2, can be used to determine the “motor mode” and the “generator mode,” as shown in FIG. 15. Specifically, if any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the first current threshold, wherein the first current threshold is corresponding to the first current clamping signal S.sub.CC1 used for determination, that is, if any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the first current clamping signal S.sub.CC1, the controller selects the desired zero vector as described above. If the motor operates in the “motor mode”, the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w can be suppressed to gradually converge, and ripples on the output current are smaller. On the contrary, if the motor operates in the “generator mode”, the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w will continue to increase. In other words, when the motor operates in the “generator mode”, the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w cannot be effectively suppressed by only a single current clamping control.

    [0053] Therefore, the present disclosure further provides a second current clamping control mode further executed in the current clamping control mode. When any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the first current threshold, but ripples on the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w cannot be reduced after the zero-vector operation, the second current clamping control mode is activated. Specifically, it is further determined that when any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than a third current threshold, wherein the third current threshold is greater than the first current threshold and less than the second current threshold, the upper switches and the lower switches of three groups of the switch arms are controlled to be turned off. In other words, by turning off all of the switches (the upper switches and the lower switches) of the power converter, the energy on the AC side is fed to the braking resistor R.sub.dc on the DC side for consumption, thereby reducing the AC current.

    [0054] Finally, determining that the output current is greater than a second current threshold to activate an overcurrent protection procedure (step S13). In particular, the second current threshold is greater than the first current threshold (and is also greater than the third current threshold), and the second current threshold is corresponding to the second current clamping signal S.sub.CC2 used for determination. When any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the second current threshold, that is any of the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w is greater than the second current clamping signal S.sub.CC2, it means that the two-stage current clamping control cannot effectively suppress the output currents i.sub.u, i.sub.v, i.sub.w. In this condition, the power converter 100 enters the overcurrent protection, and all of the switches of the power converter 100 are turned off and the system stops running, thereby reducing the output current.

    [0055] In summary, the present disclosure has the following features and advantages:

    [0056] 1. The current clamping control method for the output current of the three-phase power converter provided by the present disclosure does not turn off all of the switches of the power converter, but uses zero vectors to control the switches of the power converter so that vibration can be significantly reduced when the motor is operating under current clamping control.

    [0057] 2. The current clamping control method provided in the present disclosure reduces the a cross-voltage of the output voltage by using the zero vectors so that ripples on the output currents are significantly reduced.

    [0058] 3. The current clamping control method provided in the present disclosure can not only achieve the suppression of the output current but also prevent the output current (energy) from flowing back to the DC voltage side.

    [0059] 4. When the carrier signal rises to the peak value or falls to the valley value, the current clamping control is interrupted, and the same zero vector continues to control the switches to be turned on, which can reduce switching loss.

    [0060] Although the present disclosure has been described with reference to the preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that the present disclosure is not limited to the details thereof. Various substitutions and modifications have been suggested in the foregoing description, and others will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. Therefore, all such substitutions and modifications are intended to be embraced within the scope of the present disclosure as defined in the appended claims.