Abstract

ABSTRACT The discontinuous PWM technique, with its advantage over the continuous PWM technique in reducing switching losses in power converters, is gaining popularity. However, its deterministic nature results in discrete harmonics with significant amplitudes, which leads to electromagnetic interference (EMI) emissions. The randomised PWM technique is gaining more interest because of its effectiveness in spreading the harmonic spectrum and thus reducing EMI problems in power converters. This paper presents a carrier-based dual randomised discontinuous PWM (DRDPWM) method for a three-phase voltage inverter. The DRDPWM method combines the random carrier frequency (RCF-DPWM) and random pulse position (RPP-DPWM) schemes. In addition to reducing switching losses, DRDPWM can achieve a broad spread of the voltage spectrum with significantly smaller amplitudes. Furthermore, it produces less inverter output current distortion when compared to traditional DPWM and simple random (RCF-DPWM and RPP-DPWM) schemes. Simulations and experimental results confirm the effectiveness of the suggested method for spreading the voltage spectrum compared to simple random schemes. Additionally, an evaluation of the performance of all randomised discontinuous schemes is conducted based on a number of assessment metrics, including the switching loss factor (SLF), the power spectral density (PSD), the harmonic spread factor (HSF), and the quality factor (QF).

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