Abstract

A model reference adaptive control (MRAC)-based nonlinear speed control strategy of an interior permanent magnet (IPM) synchronous motor with an improved maximum torque operation is presented. In most servo systems, the controller is designed under the assumption that the electrical dynamics are neglected by the field-oriented control. This requires a high-performance inner-loop current control strategy. However, the separate designs for a high-performance current regulator and a robust speed controller need considerable effort. To overcome this limitation, an MRAC-based nonlinear speed control strategy for the IPM synchronous motor is presented, considering the whole nonlinear dynamics. Nonlinear speed control is achieved by an input–output linearization scheme. This scheme, however, gives an unsatisfactory performance under the mismatch of the system parameters and load conditions. For the robust output response, the controller parameters are estimated by an MRAC technique in which the disturbance torque and flux linkage are estimated. The adaptation laws are derived from Lyapunov stability theory. In view of the drive efficiency, the motor has to provide the maximum torque for a given input. To drive the IPM synchronous motor under improved maximum torque operation, the estimated flux linkage is employed for the generation of the d-axis current command. The robustness and output performance of the proposed control scheme are verified through simulation results.

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