Abstract

Three-phase three-level unidirectional rectifiers are among the most adopted topologies for general active rectification, achieving an excellent compromise between cost, complexity and overall performance. The unidirectional nature of these rectifiers negatively affects their operation, e.g., distorting the input currents around the zero-crossings, limiting the maximum converter-side displacement power factor, reducing the split DC-link mid-point current capability and limiting the converter ability to compensate the low-frequency DC-link mid-point voltage oscillation. In particular, the rectifier operation under non-unity power factor and/or under constant zero-sequence voltage injection (i.e., when unbalanced split DC-link loading occurs) typically yields large and uncontrolled input current distortion, effectively limiting the acceptable operating region of the converter. Although high bandwidth current control loops and enhanced phase current sampling strategies may improve the rectifier input current distortion, especially at light load, these approaches lose effectiveness when significant phase-shift between voltage and current is required and/or a constant zero-sequence voltage must be injected. Therefore, this paper proposes a complete analysis and performance assessment of three-level unidirectional rectifiers under non-unity power factor operation and unbalanced split DC-link loading. First, the theoretical operating limits of the converter in terms of zero-sequence voltage, modulation index, power factor angle, maximum DC-link mid-point current and minimum DC-link mid-point charge ripple are derived. Leveraging the derived zero-sequence voltage limits, a unified carrier-based pulse-width modulation (PWM) approach enabling the undistorted operation of the rectifier in all feasible operating conditions is thus proposed. Moreover, novel analytical expressions defining the maximum rectifier mid-point current capability and the minimum peak-to-peak DC-link mid-point charge ripple as functions of both modulation index and power factor angle are derived, the latter enabling a straightforward sizing of the split DC-link capacitors. The theoretical analysis is verified on a 30 kW, 20 kHz T-type rectifier prototype, designed for electric vehicle ultra-fast battery charging. The input phase current distortion, the maximum mid-point current capability and the minimum mid-point charge ripple are experimentally assessed across all rectifier operating points, showing excellent performance and accurate agreement with the analytical predictions.

Highlights

  • Pulse-width modulated (PWM) active rectification is a fundamental requirement for the supply of modern high-power electrical systems, as it ensures lower distortion, higher performance and wider regulation capability with respect to passive and/or hybrid rectification solutions [1,2]

  • The rectifier limits and performance in terms of displacement power factor (DPF), current total harmonic distortion (THD), maximum mid-point current capability and minimum mid-point charge ripple are experimentally assessed on a digitally controlled T-type converter prototype, supporting the theoretical analysis provided in Section 2, Appendices A and B

  • This paper has presented a comprehensive analysis and performance assessment of three-phase three-level unidirectional rectifiers under non-unity power factor operation and unbalanced split DC-link loading

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Summary

Introduction

Pulse-width modulated (PWM) active rectification is a fundamental requirement for the supply of modern high-power electrical systems, as it ensures lower distortion, higher performance and wider regulation capability with respect to passive and/or hybrid rectification solutions [1,2]. In a similar way, [23,24,25,26,27,29] try to address the input phase current distortion deriving from non-unity power factor operation either by injecting a suitable zero-sequence voltage component for carrier-based approaches, or by correctly allocating the redundant switching states in space vector-based implementations None of these papers proposes a general and/or unified approach to ensure undistorted operation under constant zero-sequence voltage injection. The major contributions of this work are: (1) the adoption of a unified carrier-based PWM approach ensuring undistorted operation of the rectifier in every feasible operating condition (i.e., for variable power factor and variable zero-sequence voltage injection), based on the saturation of the zero-sequence voltage reference; (2) the analytical derivation of the DC-link mid-point current limits over the complete operating range of the rectifier; and (3) the analytical derivation of the minimum low-frequency (i.e., third-harmonic) mid-point peak-to-peak charge ripple for all feasible modulation index and power factor angle values.

Converter Operation and Limits
Basics of Operation
AC-Side Voltage Formation
DC-Side Current Generation
Experimental Results
Multi-Loop Control Scheme
Steady-State Performance Evaluation
Conclusions
Full Text
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