Abstract

The virtual voltage vector (VVV) based fault-tolerant control has been widely concerned, but suffering from the increased switching frequency and the reduced bus voltage utilization at the faulty operation. Also, the harmonic space is uncontrollable. This paper proposes a conditional-extreme-point based fault-tolerant model predictive control for a five-phase permanent magnet synchronous motor. The conditional extreme point is used to predict the optimal reference voltage vector. Firstly, to suppress the harmonics, dual control sets are established without the sacrifice of bus voltage utilization. Then, the unconditional extreme point and <italic xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">y</i> -axis voltage are predicted to select the appropriate control set, and two adjacent vectors are pre-selected for generating the optimal reference voltage vector. Subsequently, the conditional extreme point of the cost function is calculated to obtain the optimal reference voltage vector. Due to the unemployment of the null vector, the switching frequency is greatly reduced. Finally, the experimental results are presented to verify the proposed control scheme.

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