The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability

Soft-switching inverters have over the last decade received a lot of attention by researchers owing to the reduction or virtual elimination of switching losses that these circuits can achieve. Possible improvements in EMC performance due to the reduced levels of dv/dt have among other advantages tri...

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Main Author: Krogemann, Markus
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13526/
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author Krogemann, Markus
author_facet Krogemann, Markus
author_sort Krogemann, Markus
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Soft-switching inverters have over the last decade received a lot of attention by researchers owing to the reduction or virtual elimination of switching losses that these circuits can achieve. Possible improvements in EMC performance due to the reduced levels of dv/dt have among other advantages triggered the development of a still growing number of zero-voltage or zero-current switching inverter circuits. More recently, the trend seems to have shifted from continuously resonant systems over to quasi-resonant topologies due to advantages in terms of device stresses and PWM compatibility. In this work, continuously resonant as well as quasi-resonant techniques are reviewed. A quasi-resonant circuit will be implemented in a three-phase PWM inverter system controlled by a network of transputers. It will be examined to which degree the working principle of this Parallel Resonant DC Link (PRDCL) inverter affects the PWM compatibility and a suitable PWM strategy will be presented and implemented. The modified PWM technique shows output quality comparable to standard PWM methods while being fully compatible with the operation of the resonant link. The conversion efficiency and EMC performance of a PWM inverter drive based on the PRDCL circuit will be measured and compared to its hard-switched equivalent. It will be shown that improvements over hard-switching inverters are possible. However, the investigation of the PRDCL PWM inverter also reveals a number of drawbacks which limit the achievable switching frequency and adversely affect the conversion efficiency. Despite the many previous publications these problems have generally been overlooked in the past.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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language English
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publishDate 1997
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spelling nottingham-135262025-02-28T11:25:42Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13526/ The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability Krogemann, Markus Soft-switching inverters have over the last decade received a lot of attention by researchers owing to the reduction or virtual elimination of switching losses that these circuits can achieve. Possible improvements in EMC performance due to the reduced levels of dv/dt have among other advantages triggered the development of a still growing number of zero-voltage or zero-current switching inverter circuits. More recently, the trend seems to have shifted from continuously resonant systems over to quasi-resonant topologies due to advantages in terms of device stresses and PWM compatibility. In this work, continuously resonant as well as quasi-resonant techniques are reviewed. A quasi-resonant circuit will be implemented in a three-phase PWM inverter system controlled by a network of transputers. It will be examined to which degree the working principle of this Parallel Resonant DC Link (PRDCL) inverter affects the PWM compatibility and a suitable PWM strategy will be presented and implemented. The modified PWM technique shows output quality comparable to standard PWM methods while being fully compatible with the operation of the resonant link. The conversion efficiency and EMC performance of a PWM inverter drive based on the PRDCL circuit will be measured and compared to its hard-switched equivalent. It will be shown that improvements over hard-switching inverters are possible. However, the investigation of the PRDCL PWM inverter also reveals a number of drawbacks which limit the achievable switching frequency and adversely affect the conversion efficiency. Despite the many previous publications these problems have generally been overlooked in the past. 1997 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13526/1/339567.pdf Krogemann, Markus (1997) The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Power electronics Electrical drives Switching circuits Electric inverters
spellingShingle Power electronics
Electrical drives
Switching circuits
Electric inverters
Krogemann, Markus
The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title_full The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title_fullStr The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title_full_unstemmed The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title_short The parallel resonant DC link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with PWM capability
title_sort parallel resonant dc link inverter: a soft-switching inverter topology with pwm capability
topic Power electronics
Electrical drives
Switching circuits
Electric inverters
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13526/