Abstract

Under rapidly changing environmental conditions, the model reference adaptive control (MRAC) based MPPT schemes need high adaptation gain to achieve fast convergence and guaranteed transient performance. The high adaptation gain causes high-frequency oscillations in the control signals resulting in numerical instability and inefficient operation. This paper proposes a novel high-frequency learning-based adjustable gain MRAC (HFLAG-MRAC) for a 2-level MPPT control architecture in photovoltaic (PV) systems to ensure maximum power delivery to the load under rapidly changing environmental conditions. In the proposed 2-level MPPT control architecture, the first level is the conventional ripple correlation control (RCC) that yields a steady-state ripple-free optimum duty cycle. The duty cycle obtained from the first level serves as an input to the proposed HFLAG-MRAC in the second level. In the proposed adaptive law, the adaptation gain varies as a function of the high-frequency ripple content of the tracking error. These high-frequency contents are the difference between the tracking error and its low-pass filtered version representing the fluctuations in output due to rapid changes in the environmental conditions. Thus, adjusting the adaptation gain by high-frequency content of the tracking error ensures fast convergence, guaranteed transient performance, and overall system stability without needing high adaptation gain. The adaptive law of the proposed HFLAG-MRAC is derived using the Lyapunov theory. Simulation studies, experimental analysis, and performance comparison with recent similar work validate the effectiveness of the proposed work.

Highlights

  • In the upcoming “Ripple correlation control” section, a detailed review of conventional ripple correlation control (RCC) technique has been discussed for steady-state duty cycle calculation

  • In “The proposed HFLAG-model reference adaptive control (MRAC) controller” section provides the mathematical modelling of the proposed HFLAG-MRAC, which is the main contribution of this paper

  • The conventional RCC maximum power point tracking (MPPT) is used to a yield ripple-free optimum duty cycle in the steady-state at the first level, which acts as an input to the novel HFLAG-MRAC at the second level

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Summary

Introduction

The MPPT controller takes voltage vpv and current ipv from the PV panel through sensors and yields duty cycle d(t)to control the switching transistor Q. This PV array voltage and current consists of both DC and ripple terms.

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