Abstract

Multiphase machines are famous for their fault-tolerant capability. Conventional fault-tolerant model predictive current control (FT-CMPC) of multiphase machines suffers from high computational burden, low switching frequency, and relatively high current harmonics. This paper proposes a fault-tolerant PWM predictive control (FT-PWMPC) to enhance the performance of fault-tolerant predictive control strategy without using complex enumeration method. The reference phase voltages are generated by a postfault mathematical model in stationary reference frame and transformed to duty cycles with a properly set common-mode voltage. Then, a comparative study of fault-tolerant predictive control strategies is presented, including FT-CMPC, FT-two-vector-based-predictive control, and the proposed FT-PWMPC. The control strategies are implemented with the same sampling frequency or switching frequency on a six-phase permanent magnet synchronous machine test bench. Experimental results of dynamic response, steady-state currents, vibration, and parameter sensitivities are given to identify the advantages and limitations of each control strategy.

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