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L1 PE Introduction

This document provides an overview of EEE 572 Advanced Power Electronics, which is taught by Professor Raja Ayyanar in Fall 2021. The course covers major applications of power electronics in areas like transportation, renewable energy, and power systems. The objectives are to prepare students to analyze, design, simulate, and optimize power electronic systems from milliwatts to megawatts. Topics include voltage source converters, switch-mode vs linear electronics, motor drives, power grids, and renewable energy interfacing. Assessments include homework, a project, midterm, and final exam. Reference materials and online videos are provided to support student learning.

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Karthick
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
193 views35 pages

L1 PE Introduction

This document provides an overview of EEE 572 Advanced Power Electronics, which is taught by Professor Raja Ayyanar in Fall 2021. The course covers major applications of power electronics in areas like transportation, renewable energy, and power systems. The objectives are to prepare students to analyze, design, simulate, and optimize power electronic systems from milliwatts to megawatts. Topics include voltage source converters, switch-mode vs linear electronics, motor drives, power grids, and renewable energy interfacing. Assessments include homework, a project, midterm, and final exam. Reference materials and online videos are provided to support student learning.

Uploaded by

Karthick
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EEE 572

Advanced Power Electronics


Fall 2021

Raja Ayyanar

Lecture 1 Introduction
Outline of lecture

• What is power electronics


• Major application areas
• Course objectives and outcomes
• Course organization

• Components of voltage source converters


• Switch mode vs. linear electronics examples

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


What is power electronics

• Power conversion and control using


power semiconductor devices and circuits

• Efficient interface between different forms


of electrical energy
- can go from ANY form to ANY other form

• Multi-disciplinary and a wide spectrum of


applications - milli watts to Mega watts

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


What is power electronics
120V
1 phase Electronics
1V +/-0.01%

Hi freq
Power lighting
Fuel Cell Electronic
500 kV
3 Phase Converter
utility
EV

Source Load
EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar
Applications:
Powering the Information Technology
• Computer power management
- notebooks to mainframes
• Power supply for ALL electronic
equipment
• Data centers large consumers
of electric power, processed
through power electronics

astontech.com

Figures from www.irf.com

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Electric drives and motion control

• Energy conservation
• Industry automation
• Robotics
aptinex.com
www.baldor.com

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Motor drives for home appliances
• Washing machines, refrigerators and air conditioners
• PMSM motors and drives

www.irf.com
Hybrid and Electric vehicles

• Inverters for drive train


• On- board Battery chargers
teslamotors.com/
• Auxiliary power unit
• Extreme fast chargers (DC)
• Soon V2G, ‘smart grid’ functions

Chevy Voltec drivetrain


chargepoint.com http://articles.sae.org/13666
Lighting
• Compact fluorescent lamps (CCFL)
• High brightness LED lighting
• Higher efficacy, flexibility, improved
color schemes, controllability
• Power electronics is a key enabler
for the modern lighting technology

From Cree LED lighting catalog

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Renewable energy interface: Photovoltaics

• Conversion of dc power from


solar cells to utility grade ac
• Maximum power point tracking
• Grid support functions

10
Power systems applications
SSB 500,230 kV SSB

ASD
DG
STATC O M
DVR

UPFC DG
DG 120,240V

DG DG
HVDC
Mi crogri d DG

Generation Transmi ssi on Di stri buti on EndUse

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Course objective

Prepare students for a design career in


Power Electronics

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Course outcomes
Students will be able to
• Analyze any power electronic circuit
• Select suitable topology/architecture, given input-output
specifications for any application (mW – MW) including
soft switching converters
• Model the systems for various objectives
• Optimally design various components of power stage
considering various design tradeoffs
• Design stable feedback controllers considering
converter-level and system-level models and objectives
• Become proficient in using simulation tools like PLECS
• Understand some practical issues of power converter
design and implementation
EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar
An example
Isolated Boost Type DC-DC Full-bridge
Converter DCLink Inverter
LCL Filter

Lboost Li Lg
HFT
CPV CDCLink
Cf Grid
PV
Rf

s vdclink s1234 vg
PWM PWM
iPV vPV PLL
d
d iLi
vg − sin(ωt)
GVpv(s) Vi * + εI + iLi*
GILi(s)
2 +
εVpv v dclink
MPPT
vPV − εV2 iLi_max*
− Gdclink(s)
vPV* + v2dclink* +

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Course organization

All lecture slides, class notes, homework


assignments and solutions posted on Canvas

Discussion forum: Homework discussions,


general PE topics

Office hours: Tuesday – 1:30-3:00 PM


(by Zoom only) Thursday – 1:00–2:00 PM
https://asu.zoom.us/j/4397053839

Midterm exam : October 13; Final exam: Dec 10

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Course organization
• Reference books
• Mohan, Undeland, Robbins, ‘Power Electronics:
Converters, applications and design’ Wiley,
Third edition, 2003
• Erickson, Maksimovic, ‘Fundamentals of
Power Electronics’ Second edition
• Mohan, ‘First course on Power Electronics’
MNPERE Publishers, 2009
• Instructor lecture slides, simulations
• PSERC Academy videos at
http://psercacademy.asu.edu/ (videos currently work
with Microsoft Edge browser; with Chrome browsing in incognito mode works)

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Course organization

PsercAcademy.asu.edu

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Grading

Homework 20%
Project 20%
Midterm exam 27%
Final exam 33%

> 95 A+ 80-84 B+
90-94 A 75-79 B
85-89 A- 70-74 B- etc.

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Project
• Any application or concept in power electronics
• Major tasks
• Formulation of specifications from
literature or product search
• Comparison of two or more approaches
• Detailed, automated design of power stage
and controller for the chosen approach
• Extensive simulation validation
• Formal technical report
• Done in teams of strictly 2 students
• Project selection due on 11/1, and final report
due on 12/1
EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar
PLECS simulations
• PLECS is the supported simulation tool for this course
• Students will be given a code with which they can
get a license from plexim.com
• Stand alone version (recommended)
• Strictly for course work only
• Very important to develop expertise early in the course
• Will be used in class lectures, homeworks & project
• Valuable tool in your design career

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


General classification of converters

Conversion from any form of electrical


energy to any other form
DC - different magnitudes
AC - different magnitudes, frequency, phase

• AC-DC converters (rectifiers)


• DC-DC converters
• DC-AC converters (inverters)
• AC-AC converters (cyclo-converters
matrix converters)

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar


Power electronic converters

• Voltage source or voltage link converters (VSC)


• Current source or current link converters (CSC)
• Matrix converters
• Thyristor based self and line commutated converters

• Voltage source converters probably the most


widely used at present
• Characteristics of currently available
power semiconductor devices favor VSC
• We focus on VSC here and look at the basic
components of a generic VSC

EEE572 Raja Ayyanar


Components of a voltage source converter

EEE572 Raja Ayyanar


Example: Single phase PV inverter
Isolated Boost Type DC-DC Full-bridge
Converter DCLink Inverter
LCL Filter

Lboost Li Lg
HFT
CPV CDCLink
Cf Grid
PV
Rf

s vdclink s1234 vg
PWM PWM
iPV vPV PLL
d
d iLi
vg − sin(ωt)
GVpv(s) Vi * + εI + iLi*
GILi(s)
2 +
εVpv v dclink
MPPT
vPV − εV2 iLi_max*
− Gdclink(s)
vPV* + v2dclink* +

EEE572 Raja Ayyanar


Power supply problem example #1
Input voltage : 10V to 14V DC
Output voltage : 5V DC +/- 0.1%
Output current : 1A max.

Linear Electronics Approach


Io
vec
+ +
Control
Vin Load Vo

- -

 Excellent regulation, control


 Low noise, ripple at the output

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Problems with linear electronics approach
Iin = Io Io
Input voltage : 10V to 14V DC vec
+ +
Output voltage : 5V DC +/- 0.1%
Output current : 1A max. Vin Load Vo

- -

Po Vo I o 5 ×1
Efficiency = = =
Pin Vin I in 14 × 1

= 35.7%

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Problems with linear electronics approach
iT = Io Io
+ -
Input voltage : 10V to 14V DC vT
+ +
Output voltage : 5V DC +/- 0.1%
Output current : 1A max. Vin Load Vo

- -

Power lost in transistor = vT I o


vT
= (14 − 5)× 1 = 9W 9V
0 t
iT
1A
0 t
↓ Need for large heatsinks / Ploss
thermal management 9W

↓ Impact on power density


0 t

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Switch mode approach

Uses a bi-positional switch Switch in position 1 vA = Vin


Switch in position 2 vA = 0
vA
+ (V)
1 Vin
14
Vin A 12
+ 10 average
2 5
_ vA
_ 0 t

 By controlling the duration of ON interval (time when


switch is in Position 1), the average output can be
continuously controlled

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Simple step-down converter

+
iL
Vin
+ +
_ vA Vo
_ _

Low-pass filter
at the output

• High frequency content in vA filtered using LC filter


• Filter size and cost very small with high frequency

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Bi-positional switch: electronic implementation

Vin

 SPDT switch realized with two SPST switches


 SPST implemented with MOSFETs and IGBTs or other power
semiconductor devices
 Bi-positional switch is a main building-block of power converters

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Switch mode approach: efficiency

vT
14 V

0 t
iT
1A
0 t
Ploss

0 t

• Efficiency, theoretically 100% (with ideal components)


- Zero voltage when switch is ON
- Zero current when switch is OFF
• Practical efficiency > 95% in many applications

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Power supply problem example #2

Input voltage : 1.5V to 2V DC


Output voltage : 5V DC +/- 0.1%
Output current : 0.1A max.

Linear Approach

??
Raja Ayyanar, ASU
Power supply problem example #3
Isolated Power Supplies
Input voltage : 120V AC +/-20%
Output voltage : 5V DC +/- 0.1%
Output current : 20A max.

Linear Approach Line-Commutated Approach


High power loss Thyristor
120 V
60 Hz

Load
Large C

60 Hz transformer 60 Hz transformer
bulky, costly bulky, costly Bulky filter

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Switch mode isolated power supply
Full-Bridge DC-DC Converter
Low loss

120 V
60 Hz Load

100 kHz transformer Small filters


Small C

 High-frequency transformer
- typically smaller by a factor of 50 – 100
 smaller filter
 higher efficiency
× EMI problems

Raja Ayyanar, ASU


Summary

• Power electronics
- EFFICIENT power conversion and control
using electronic (power) devices;
- conversion from any form of electrical
energy to any other form
• Major applications
• Components of a voltage source converter
• PE solutions to typical power supply problems

EEE 572 – Raja Ayyanar

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