Browsing by Author "Mitrovic, Vladimir"
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- Communication and Control in Power Electronics SystemsMitrovic, Vladimir (Virginia Tech, 2021-12-17)The demands of a modern way of life have changed the way power electronics systems work. For instance, the grid has to provide not only the service of delivering electrical energy but also the communication to enable interactions between customers and enable them to be producers of electrical energy, too. Thus, the smart grid has come into existence. The consequence of the smart grid is that consumers could be “smart.” The most obvious consumers are households, so the houses have to also be smart and must be equipped with various power electronics devices for producing and managing electrical energy. Again, all those devices have to communicate somehow and provide data for managing electrical energy in the house. Zoomed in further, novel, state-of-the-art measurement equipment could have been built from different power electronics devices, and communication among them would be necessary for good operation. Zoomed further in, communication among different pieces of power electronics devices (such as converters) could offer benefits such as flexibility, abstraction, and modularity. This thesis provides insight into different communication techniques and protocols used in power electronics systems. A top-down approach presents three different levels of communication used in real-life projects with all the challenges they bring, starting with the smart house, followed by the state-of-the-art impedance measurement unit, and finalizing with internal power electronics building block (PEBB) communication. In the case of a smart house, where the house is equipped with solar panels, charge controllers, batteries, and inverters, communication allows interoperation between different elements of the power electronics system, enabling energy management. Results show the operation of the system and energy management algorithm. A house of this type won first prize at an international competition where energy management was one of the disciplines. The impedance measurement unit consists of different power electronics devices. In this case, too, communication between devices enables the operation of the impedance measurement unit. Communication techniques used here are shown together with measurement results. Finally, inter-PEBB communication has been shown as an approach for interaction among the different elements inside the PEBB, such as controller, GDs, sensors, and actuators. Real-time communication protocol, including all challenges, is described and developed. This approach is shown to enable communication and synchronization among different nodes inside the PEBB. Communication enables all internal elements of the PEBB to be transparent outside the PEBB in the sense that data gathered from them could be reused anywhere else in the system. Also, this approach enables the development of distributed event (time) driven control, hardware and software, abstraction, high modularity, and flexibility. A very important aspect of inter-PEBB communication is synchronization. A simple technique of sharing a clock among the parts of a 6 kV PEBB has been shown.
- Design of a 10 kV SiC MOSFET-based high-density, high-efficiency, modular medium-voltage power converterMocevic, Slavko; Yu, Jianghui; Fan, Boran; Sun, Keyao; Xu, Yue; Stewart, Joshua; Rong, Yu; Song, He; Mitrovic, Vladimir; Yan, Ning; Wang, Jun; Cvetkovic, Igor; Burgos, Rolando; Boroyevich, Dushan; DiMarino, Christina; Dong, Dong; Motwani, Jayesh Kumar; Zhang, Richard (IEEE, 2022-03)Simultaneously imposed challenges of high-voltage insulation, high dv/dt, high-switching frequency, fast protection, and thermal management associated with the adoption of 10 kV SiC MOSFET, often pose nearly insurmountable barriers to potential users, undoubtedly hindering their penetration in medium-voltage (MV) power conversion. Key novel technologies such as enhanced gatedriver, auxiliary power supply network, PCB planar dc-bus, and high-density inductor are presented, enabling the SiC-based designs in modular MV converters, overcoming aforementioned challenges. However, purely substituting SiC design instead of Sibased ones in modular MV converters, would expectedly yield only limited gains. Therefore, to further elevate SiC-based designs, novel high-bandwidth control strategies such as switching-cycle control (SCC) and integrated capacitor-blocked transistor (ICBT), as well as high-performance/high-bandwidth communication network are developed. All these technologies combined, overcome barriers posed by state-of-the-art Si designs and unlock system level benefits such as very high power density, high-efficiency, fast dynamic response, unrestricted line frequency operation, and improved power quality, all demonstrated throughout this paper.