Abstract

Photovoltaic (PV) systems composed by two energy conversion stages are attractive from an operation point of view. This is because the maximum power point tracking (MPPT) range is extended, due to the voltage decoupling between the PV system and the dc-link. Nevertheless, the additional dc-dc conversion stage increases the volume, cost and power converter losses. Therefore, central inverters based on a single-stage converter, have been a mainstream solution to interface large-scale PV arrays composed of several strings connected in parallel made by the series connections of PV modules. The concept of partial power converters (PPC), previously reported as a voltage step-up stage, has not addressed in depth for all types of PV applications. In this work, a PPC performing voltage step-down operation is proposed and analyzed. This concept is interesting from the industry point of view, since with the new isolation standards of PV modules are reaching 1500 V, increasing both the size of the string and dc-link voltage for single-stage inverters. Since grid connection remains typically at 690 V, larger strings impose more demanding operation for single-stage central inverters (required to operate at lower modulation indexes and demand higher blocking voltage devices), making the proposed step-down PPC an attractive solution. Theoretical analysis and an experimental test-bench was built in order to validate the PPC concept, the control performance and the improvement of the conversion efficiency. The experimental results corroborate the benefits of using a PPC, in terms of increasing the system efficiency by reducing the processed power of the converter, while not affecting the system performance.

Highlights

  • Traditional single-stage converters have been the mainstream solution for grid-connected PV systems

  • The power density of the converter (ρ Full Power Converters (FPC), ρ partial power converters (PPC) ) is directly related to the power processed per unity of volume, and it can be expressed in terms of the partial power ratio K pr as: ρ PPC

  • The efficiency is calculated using the experimental results of voltage and current, which are taken from the complete dc-stage (PPC), and the isolated Full-bridge dc–dc converter

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional single-stage converters (string and central inverters) have been the mainstream solution for grid-connected PV systems. Since grid connection remains below 690 V, larger strings impose more demanding operation for single-stage central inverters. It requires to operate the inverter at lower modulation indexes reducing their efficiency, and it requires higher blocking voltage devices. On the other hand, adding an additional conversion stage performing buck operation leads to increase the component count, converter’s size and conversion losses. This is the motivation to take advantage of the PPC concept, which was initially implemented for PV systems in [2], in order to reduce the power losses in the two-stage configurations. In this work a PPC performing step-down operation is analyzed and evaluated with a laboratory experimental test-bench

Step-Down Partial Power Converters for PV Systems
Efficiency Analysis
Volume and Power Density Analysis
Operation Range Analysis
Step-Down PPC Circuit Topologies
Step-Down PPC Connected at dc-Link Side
Partial Power Ratio
Analysis of the Topology
Experimental Validation
Operation Performance
Voltage Range of Operation
Comparison between a Step-Down PPC and a Full Bridge Power Converter
Findings
Conclusions

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