TIDUCJ0G November   2016  – April 2020

 

  1.   Revision History

DC Bus Regulation Loop

The DC bus regulation loop is assumed to be providing the power reference. This loop is divided by the square of the line voltages RMS to provide the conductance, which is further multiplied by the line voltage to give the instantaneous current command.

Small signal model of the DC bus regulation loop is developed by linearizing Equation 3 around the operating point.

Equation 3. TIDM-1000 TIDM1000_equation3.gif

For resistive load the bus voltage and current relate, as shown in Equation 4.

Equation 4. TIDM-1000 TIDM1000_equation4.gif

The DC voltage regulation loop control model can be drawn, as shown in Figure 6. An additional Vbus feedforward is applied to make the control loop independent of the bus voltage, and, thus, the plant model for the bus control can be written as shown in Equation 5.

Equation 5. TIDM-1000 TIDM1000_equation5.gif

Where:

  • Hp_bus is the voltage loop plant as seen by the digital controller Gv.
  • Output of the Gv is the power reference Po*
  • vbus* is the voltage command/reference, vbus is the actual bus voltage.
  • Co is the output capacitor, RL is the load resistance.

Using Figure 6, a proportional integrator (PI) compensator is designed for the voltage loop. The bandwidth of this loop is kept low as it is in conflict with the THD below steady state.

Figure 6. DC Voltage Loop Control ModelTIDM-1000 tidm-1000-voltageloopmodel-photograph-block-diagram.gif

Additionally, a non-linear PI loop is used to reduce the transients in case of step load changes. Figure 7 shows the structure of the non-linear PI loop implemented on this design

Figure 7. Non-Linear PI Loop for Voltage ControllerTIDM-1000 NonLinearVLoop.gif