Abstract
Three-phase four-wire inverters are usually used to feed unbalanced three-phase loads with neutral currents. The unbalanced three-phase loads also bring to second-order ripples in the DC bus, which should be mitigated by bulky DC-bus capacitors to improve the system performance. In this case, the DC capacitance is designed for the second-order ripple frequency instead of the switching frequency, so it can not be reduced even when SiC MOSFETs are adopted to achieve high switching frequency. Although various topologies of three-phase four-wire inverters has been proposed to provide the path for neutral currents, they cannot handle the second-order ripples. Also, some active power decoupling solutions can be adopted, but they require additional active swithes and components, which increases the cost of the system. In this paper, a four-leg buck inverter is proposed, which consists of four DC-DC buck converters. Each buck converter is independently controlled. This topology can not only provide neutral currents, but also reduce the second-order ripples in the DC bus with active power decoupling control. The proposed topology doesn't require any additional active switches comparing to the conventional topologies with neutral legs. The effectiveness of proposed topology is verified by the simulation in MATLAB/Simulink.
Accepted Version (Free)
Published Version
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