High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives

The aim of this research project was to develop a vector controlled induction motor drive operating without a speed or position sensor but having a dynamic performance comparable to a sensored vector drive. The methodology was to detect the motor speed from the machine rotor slot harmonics using dig...

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Main Author: Blasco Giménez, Ramón
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13038/
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author Blasco Giménez, Ramón
author_facet Blasco Giménez, Ramón
author_sort Blasco Giménez, Ramón
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The aim of this research project was to develop a vector controlled induction motor drive operating without a speed or position sensor but having a dynamic performance comparable to a sensored vector drive. The methodology was to detect the motor speed from the machine rotor slot harmonics using digital signal processing and to use this signal to tune a speed estimator and thus reduce or eliminate the estimator’s sensitivity to parameter variations. Derivation of a speed signal from the rotor slot harmonics using a Discrete Fourier Transform-based algorithm has yielded highly accurate and robust speed signals above machine frequencies of about 2 Hz and independent of machine loads. The detection, which has been carried out using an Intel i860 processor in parallel with the main vector controller, has been found to give predictable and consistent results duing speed transient conditions. The speed signal obtained from the rotor slot harmonics has been used to tune a Model Reference Adaptive speed and flux observer, with the resulting sensorless drive operating to steady state speed accuracies down to 0.02 rpm above 2 Hz (i.e. 60 rpm for the 4 pole machine). A significant aspect of the research has been the mathematical derivation of the speed bandwidth limitations for both sensored and sensorless drives, thus allowing for quantitative comparison of their dynamic performance. It has been found that the speed bandwidth limitation for sensorless drives depends on the accuracy to which the machine parameters are known and that for maximum dynamic performance it is necessary to tune the flux and speed estimator against variations in stator resistance in addition to the tuning mechanism deriving from the DFT speed detector. New dynamic stator resistance tuning algorithms have been implemented. The resulting sensorless drive has been found to have a speed bandwidth equivalent to sensored drives fitted with medium resolution encoders (i.e. about 500 ppr), and a zero speed accuracy of ± 8 rpm under speed control. These specifications are superior to any reported in the research literature.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-13038
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:31:40Z
publishDate 1995
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-130382025-02-28T11:22:47Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13038/ High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives Blasco Giménez, Ramón The aim of this research project was to develop a vector controlled induction motor drive operating without a speed or position sensor but having a dynamic performance comparable to a sensored vector drive. The methodology was to detect the motor speed from the machine rotor slot harmonics using digital signal processing and to use this signal to tune a speed estimator and thus reduce or eliminate the estimator’s sensitivity to parameter variations. Derivation of a speed signal from the rotor slot harmonics using a Discrete Fourier Transform-based algorithm has yielded highly accurate and robust speed signals above machine frequencies of about 2 Hz and independent of machine loads. The detection, which has been carried out using an Intel i860 processor in parallel with the main vector controller, has been found to give predictable and consistent results duing speed transient conditions. The speed signal obtained from the rotor slot harmonics has been used to tune a Model Reference Adaptive speed and flux observer, with the resulting sensorless drive operating to steady state speed accuracies down to 0.02 rpm above 2 Hz (i.e. 60 rpm for the 4 pole machine). A significant aspect of the research has been the mathematical derivation of the speed bandwidth limitations for both sensored and sensorless drives, thus allowing for quantitative comparison of their dynamic performance. It has been found that the speed bandwidth limitation for sensorless drives depends on the accuracy to which the machine parameters are known and that for maximum dynamic performance it is necessary to tune the flux and speed estimator against variations in stator resistance in addition to the tuning mechanism deriving from the DFT speed detector. New dynamic stator resistance tuning algorithms have been implemented. The resulting sensorless drive has been found to have a speed bandwidth equivalent to sensored drives fitted with medium resolution encoders (i.e. about 500 ppr), and a zero speed accuracy of ± 8 rpm under speed control. These specifications are superior to any reported in the research literature. 1995 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13038/1/360194.pdf Blasco Giménez, Ramón (1995) High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Electric motors Induction electronic control
spellingShingle Electric motors
Induction
electronic control
Blasco Giménez, Ramón
High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title_full High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title_fullStr High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title_full_unstemmed High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title_short High performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
title_sort high performance sensorless vector control of induction motor drives
topic Electric motors
Induction
electronic control
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13038/