Abstract

Today voltage source inverters (VSIs) operate with high switching frequencies (let us assume higher than 50 kHz) owing to the fast Si (Silicon) or SiC (Silicon Carbide) switching transistors. However, there are some applications, e.g., with slower switches (e.g., IGBT—Isolated Gate Bipolar Transistor) or when lower dynamic power losses are required when the switching frequency is low (let us assume about 10 kHz). The resonant frequency of the output filter is usually below 1 kHz. The measurements of Bode plots of the measurement traces of various microprocessor-controlled VSIs show that in this frequency range, the characteristics of these channels can be simply approximated through two or three switching periods delay. For the high switching frequency, it is not noticeable, but for the low frequency it can cause some oscillations in the output voltage. One of the solutions can be to use the predictor of the measured state variables based on the full-state Luenberger observer or the linear Kalman filter. Both solutions will be simulated in MATLAB/Simulink and the chosen one will be tested in the experimental VSI. The research aims to omit delays in the measurement channels for the low switching frequency by using the predictions for the measured state variables and finally increasing the gains of the controller to decrease the output voltage distortions.

Full Text
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