- Open Access
- Total Downloads : 431
- Authors : V. Mahananda Reddy, K. Raghavendra Reddy, V. B. Borghate
- Paper ID : IJERTV4IS060353
- Volume & Issue : Volume 04, Issue 06 (June 2015)
- DOI : http://dx.doi.org/10.17577/IJERTV4IS060353
- Published (First Online): 10-06-2015
- ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
- Publisher Name : IJERT
- License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
A Comprehensive Review on Single-Phase Five-level Inverter Topologies
V. Mahananda Reddy
PG student Electrical Engineering
VNIT-Nagpur Nagpur, India
K. Raghavendra Reddy
Research Scholor Electrical Engineering VNIT-Nagpur Nagpur, India
V. B. Borghate Associate Professor Electrical Engineering
VNIT-Nagpur Nagpur, India
Abstract Multilevel inverters have been developed to handle high power and high voltage in the flexible power systems. These inverters offer some inherent advantages over conventional 2-level inverters. High quality of the output voltage of the multilevel inverters is one of the most important advantages. Though the multilevel inverters hold attractive features, usage of more switches in the conventional configuration poses a limitation to its wide range application. The emphasis is on reducing the number of switches, which inturn reduces switching losses, and avoiding the capacitors, which may likely to cause voltage imbalance, and using less number of DC sources, which may increase additional isolation Transformer requirements, while designing a new prototype. A review has been done on the recently proposed topologies. A control strategy is proposed in this paper to minimize total harmonic distortion (THD) and a comparative analysis has been made with level shifted pulse width modulation (LSPWM).A prototype has been constructed with less switch count. The simulation analysis is
here requires minimum of Two Isolated DC Voltage sources or Series of Capacitors supplied from one DC source.
In this paper section II gives comparative analysis of various topological structures. The operating modes of adopted topology is discussed in section III. Section IV describes the proposed control scheme. The simulation and experimental results are presented in section V, followed by concluding remarks in section VI.
II. FIVE LEVEL INVERTER TOPOLOGIES
-
Type A topology
In Type A there exist two sections namely Level selection part and Polarity Reversal part [1]. Level selection can be done by an Auxiliary bidirectional switch and a 4-switch Bridge takes care of polarity reversal enabling bipolar voltage levels. The basic five level Topology is shown in Fig. 1. (a)
C 1
S5
done using PSIM-9.3 and validated through experimentation.
Keywords Cascaded Multilevel Inverter, Hybrid Topologies, Total Harmonic Distortion, switch count.
S1
+
D 3 D1
+
V – S5
C1 + V
LOAD
–
–
S3
S6
+
–
S1 S3
LOAD
-
INTRODUCTION
C2 D2 D 4 S4
S2 C2 + S7 S2
S4
–
V S8
In order to reach high voltage and high power with available switching devices and improve output waveforms, multilevel inverters have been developed. Over the last decade, great advances
(a) (b)
+
V V +
have been made in multilevel inverter/converter topologies. In the literature, there are three traditional structures that were investigated in early and mid-1990s: the diode-clamped multilevel inverter, which derived from the neutral-point clamped inverter invented in 1979, the
– S1
+
S6 S5
S3
–
LOAD
– S1
V
+
+
–
S3
–
LOAD
capacitor-clamped multilevel inverter or flying capacitor in 1992, and the cascade multilevel inverter in 1995. As multilevel inverters are
+ S4
V
–
S2 D
S5 S4 S2
gaining increasing importance, newer topologies are being proposed to reduce part count for large number of levels in output voltage. These research breakthroughs have made the cascade multilevel
(c) (d)
+
+
S1 S2 S 3
–
–
inverters a perfect topology for power system applications such as FACTS devices. Many papers have addressed the voltage unbalance problem that is inherent to all these multilevel inverters, unless each voltage level is provided by a separate and isolated dc source such as
+
S1 S2 S3 L
+
–
– O
D
V V A
V + V + –
the cascaded multilevel inverter for medium voltage motor drives [8]. A generalized multilevel inverter topology was proposed to achieve
S6 S5 S4
S6 S5 S4
LOAD
automatic voltage balance of each dc voltage without additional balancing circuits in 2000.More recently published topologies[1-5] can categorized as Type-A, Type-B and Type-C Multi Level Inverter (MLI) topologies. Basic single phase five level topologies presented
(e) (f)
–
Fig. 1. Recently proposed topologies
-
-
Type B topology:
The Level selection in Type B contains switches only and/or Diodes and Polarity Reversal part [2,4]. The Level selection can be done by only four bidirectional switches and a 4-switch Bridge takes care of polarity reversal enabling bipolar voltage levels as depicted in Fig. 1.(c) and Fig. 1.(d)
-
Type C topology
The Type C is formed by back-to-back connection of two H bridges [3-5], which has three leg structure with six unidirectional as depicted in Fig. 1.(e).In the literature same three leg topology is depicted in Fig.1.(f) as cross-connected structure and in Asymmetrical case this topology synthesizes seven levels with middle leg requiring bidirectional natured.
-
Cascaded H-Bridge multilevel inverter
The cascaded H-bridge multilevel inverter single phase five level as shown in Fig.2. In conventional multilevel inverters cascaded H- bridge is best topology due to its inherent advantages for medium voltage and high power applications.
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
CHB
Fig. 1(a).
Fig. 1(b).
Fig. 1(c) & (e) & (f) Fig. 1(d)
0
5
10
15
20
25
Output Voltage Levels
0
Number of Switches
Fig. 3. Comparison of Various Topologies.
In view of less number of switch count the type A suits. Type B Fig.1. (d) is preferable for a basic five level topology.
-
OPERATING MODES OF IMPLEMENTED FIVE-LEVEL INVRTER
The inverter produces output voltage in five levels: zero, Vdc,
2Vdc, 0,-Vdc and -2Vdc.The advantages of the inverter topology are: Improved output voltage quality, smaller filter size, Lower
Vdc
S11
S31
A
+ VH1
–
Electromagnetic interferences, and Lower total harmonics distortion compared with conventional five level pulse width modulation
,Reduced number of switches compared to the conventional 5-level inverter. The cascaded H-bridges multilevel inverter introduces the
Vdc
S41 S12
H1
S12 S32
VAN
0
0
+ VH2
– N
Vdc
2Vdc
-Vdc
2 T
– 2Vdc
idea of using separate dc sources to produce an ac voltage waveform. Each H-bridge inverter is connected to its own DC source Vdc. By cascading the ac outputs of each H bridge inverter, ac voltage waveform is produced. By closing the appropriate switches, each H- bridge inverter can produce five different voltages: When a switch S1 and S3 of one particular H-bridge inverter are closed, the output voltage is 0 as shown in Fig.4. (a) .When a switch S1 and S2 are
S42 S22
H2
Fig.2 Cascade H-Bridge inverter
-
-
comparision:
Cascade H-Bridge s compared with various recent topologies. A comparative analysis has been done as listed in the Table I keeping in the view of minimizing number of switching devices for synthesizing five level output waveform. The analysis is further generalized for N levels as shown in Fig. 3. The topology shown in Fig. 1. (d) Is adopted for implementation for further analysis.
Table. I. Comparison of various topologies
closed, the output voltage is +Vdc as shown in Fig.4. (b). When a switch S1, S2 and S5 are closed, the output voltage is +2Vdc as shown in Fig.4. (c). When a switch S2 and S4 are closed, the output voltage is 0 as shown in Fig.4. (d).when a switch S3 and S4 of one particular H-bridge inverter are closed, the output voltage is -Vdc as shown in Fig.4. (e). When a switch S3, S4 and S5 are closed, the output voltage is -2Vdc as shown in Fig.4. (f). Where the H stands for one particular H-bridge inverter. Therefore, to obtain the total ac voltage produced by the multilevel inverter, these five distinct dc voltages are added together.
S.no
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
V0
1.
On
On
Off
Off
On
2V
2.
On
On
Off
Off
Off
V
3.
On
Off
On
Off
Off
0
4.
Off
On
Off
On
Off
5.
Off
Off
On
On
Off
-V
6.
Off
Off
On
On
On
-2V
Table. II. Switching States.
Sr.No
Topology
Number of Switches
Diodes
n levels
5 level
1
Cascaded H-Bridge
2(n-1)
8
0
2
Type A
(n+5)/2
5
4
3
Type B Fig 1.b
n+3
8
16
4
Type B Fig 1.c
n+1
6
0
5
Type B Fig 1.d
(n+5)/2
5
1
6
Type C
n+1
6
0
+
V – S1
Is
S
V +
1
S3 –
S3
I0 + V0 –
Is
+
V – S1
S3
I0 + V0 –
Fundamental value of output voltage calculated using Fourier analysis
VOut Bn * sin(nwt) ; n 0 to (3)
LOAD
S5
S4 S2
LOAD
S5 Is
S4 S2
LOAD
Is
S4 S2
B 2 1 (1)n n
a(cos n1
-
cos n2
) b(cos n2
)/ n
V
V
V
+ + +
– – –
V f 1 4a(cos1 cos2 ) b(cos2 )/ (4)
-
(b)
-
(c)
2 2
+
V – S1
S5
S4
V
+
–
S3
LOAD
S2
Is
+
V – S1
S5
V
+
–
S3
0 + –
I V0
LOAD
Is
S2
Is
+
V – S1
V
+
–
S3
0 + –
I V0
LOAD
Is
THD=100
S2
THD
VOrms V frms
V
2
frms
start
(5)
(d) (e)
Fig. 4. Operating modes
-
0 Level (b) V Level (c) 2V Level
(d) 0 Level (e) -V Level (f) -2V Level
-
PROPOSED CONTROL SCHEME
(f)
No
end
1<900
1 1+inc
2 2
Yes
No
thd<100
Yes
thd THD+inc
In literature various switching procedure is like level-shifted sinusoidal pulse-width modulation (LS-SPWM), selective harmonic elimination (SHE) and SVPWM [10].The popular scheme is space- vector PWM but it becomes very complicated for more than three levels and hence the scheme is not dealt with in this paper. The
No
2<900
No
Thd<THD
THD
thd
Yes
proposed switching scheme to get minimum THD as shown in Fig.6.
A. Calculation of switching angles
THD Derivation For 5-Level:
Yes
2 2+inc
Vo V2
V1
0 1
-V1
2
-V2 2
1
Fig.6. Proposed control scheme.
Using (2), (4), (5) equations and proposed control scheme shown
2 T in fig.6. These implemented through Matlab programming switching angles1, 2 are calculated.
-
SIMULATIO RESULTS AND EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
10V +
Fig. 5. Five level output voltage waveform.
Rms value output voltage calculated below
–
0 +
I V0 –
load
V 2 1 2 2
2 2
1 2
Orms
V1 d
V1 d
V1 d (1) +
1
2 2
– 10V
2V 2 V 2 2
VO,rms
1 2 1 2
2 (2)
Fig.7. Switched diode structure five-level inverter
-
Simulation Results
The switched diode structure is simulated using PSIM 9.3 for symmetrical sources of each Vdc=10V as shown in Fig. 7. The results are obtained with a resistive load with R=200 using LSSPWM with the switching frequency of 1.15 kHz with modulation index m=1.0. The voltage waveform and its FFT analysis as shown in Fig.8.
The switched diode structure is simulated using PSIM 9.3 for symmetrical sources of each Vdc=10V as shown in Fig. 7. The results are obtained with a resistive load with R=200 using proposed control scheme with fundamental frequency. The voltage waveform and its FFT analysis as shown in Fig.9.
Fig. 8. (a) Output voltage
Fig. 9. (a) Output voltage waveform of proposed scheme
VP1
25
20
15
10
5
0
0 500 1000 1500 2000
Frequency (Hz)
Fig. 9. (b) FFT analysis
Fig. 8. (b) FFT analysis
Modulation index
%THD
at fc= 1KHz
%THD
at fc= 2 KHz
%THD
at fc= 3 KHz
%THD
at fc= 5 KHz
0.3
106
106.27
106.1
108.7
0.5
52.05
52.29
52.05
53.68
0.7
41.3
42.07
41.83
42.25
0.75
40.18
40.12
40.26
40.52
0.8
38.28
38.37
38.38
38.70
0.9
33.26
33.61
33.45
33.92
1
26.81
27.04
26.78
27.30
Table .III. Percentage of THD in Output voltage of recent topology
TMS320F28335
Gate Driver Using TLP-250
DC supply
Power ckt board
LOAD
From table we observed that as the modulation index increases percentage THD of output voltage decreases.
Fig. 10. Hardware Setup
-
Experimental results
The prototype hardware setup as shown in Fig.10.the proposed algorithm implemented digitally by using DSP TMS320F28335 with the code composer studio 6.0. The Switched diode structure five- level inverter is accommodated in the laboratory shown in Fig. The IGBTs are used in the prototype are IRG4PH50UD and the diode used is RHRP30120. The recent multilevel inverter is tested with isolated dc power supplies of 10V, 2A with R-load R=200 ohm .The THD analysis is done using TPS2024B with application key, which can evaluate harmonics up to 50th order.
The output voltage waveform and FFT analysis are shown in Fig.11 (a) and (b) with switching frequency 1.15 KHz and with proposed control algorithm in Fig.12 (a) and (b) respectively
-
(b)
-
Fig. 11. (a) Output voltage waveform (b) FFT analysis
(a) (b)
Fig. 12 (a) Output voltage waveform (b) FFT analysis
-
-
CONCLUSION
The comparison has been made on recent multi-level inverter topologies in view of reducing number of switches. A control strategy is proposed to reduce the THD in output voltage and the results are compared with those of LSPWM by simulation. The simulation results are validated by constructing the prototype. The results are summarized in the table IV. The proposed control scheme produce minimum THD with less switching loss. The topology implemented in this paper is an efficient one because it consists of less switches producing less switching loss, and it is operated by proposed control scheme which produces minimum THD with minimum switching loss.
Sr.No. |
Switching technique |
Switching frequency |
%THD |
|
Simulation result |
Hardware result |
|||
1. |
Level shifted SPWM |
1.15 kHz |
26.4 |
26.1 |
2. |
Proposed control scheme |
50 Hz |
16.42 |
16.0 |
TABLE IV Comparison of simulation and hardware results
REFERENCES
-
G. Ceglia, V. Grau, V. Guzmán, C. Sánchez, F. Ibáñez, J. Walter, A. Millán, M. I. Giménez, A New Multilevel Inverter Topology, Proceedings of the Fifth IEEE International Caracas Conference on Devices Circuits and Systems, Dominican Republic, vol. 1,pp. 212-218, May 2004.
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Shalchi Alishah, R.; Nazarpour, D.; Hosseini, S.H.; Sabahi, M., "Switched-diode structure for multilevel converter with reduced number of power electronic devices," Power Electronics, IET , vol.7, no.3, pp.648,656, March 2014
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Ebrahim Babaei,Mohammad Farhadi Kangarlu, Farshid Najaty Mazgar,Symmetric and asymmetric multilevel inverter topologies with reduced switching devices, Electric Power Systems Research 86. 2012,pp.122-130
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Krishna Kumar Gupta, Shailendra Jain, Comprehensive review of a recently proposed multilevel inverter, IET Power Electron., 2014, Vol. 7, Iss. 3, pp. 467479 467 ,doi: 10.1049/iet-pel.2012.0438.
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Ebrahim Babaei, Mohammad Farhadi Kangarlu, Farshid Najaty Mazgar,Symmetric and asymmetric multilevel inverter topologies with reduced switching devices, Electric Power Systems Research 86. 2012,pp.122-130
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Javad Ebrahimi, Ebrahim Babaei,and Goverg B. Gharehpetian, A New Topology of Cascaded Multilevel Converters With Reduced Number of Components for High-Voltage Applications, IEEE Trans. Power Electronics, vol. 26, no.11, November 2011
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Ebrahim Babaei, Mohammad Farhadi Kangarlu, Farshid Najaty Mazgar,Symmetric and asymmetric multilevel inverter topologies with reduced switching devices, Electric Power Systems Research 86. 2012,pp.122-130
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Javad Ebrahimi, Ebrahim Babaei,and Goverg B. Gharehpetian, A New Topology of Cascaded Multilevel Converters With Reduced Number of Components for High-Voltage Applications, IEEE Trans. Power Electronics, vol. 26, no.11, November 2011
-
Electric Power Systems Research 86 (2012) 122 130 Electric Power Systems Research journal homepage Symmetric and asymmetric multilevel inverter topologies with reduced switching devices
-
Ahmed, I.; Borghate, V.B., "Simplified space vector modulation technique for seven-level cascaded H-bridge inverter," Power Electronics, IET , vol.7, no.3, pp.604,613, March 2014
V. Mahananda Reddy received B.Tech (Electrical) from JNTU Anantapur. He is presently
pursing M.Tech (Power Electronics & Drives) in Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology (VNIT), Nagpur, India .His area of research interest in multilevel inverters and DC-DC converters.
K. Raghavendra Reddy received B.Tech (Electrical) from SCR Engg. College, under JNTU Hyderabad, M.Tech (Power Control & Drives) from National
Institute of Technology (NIT), and Rourkela, India .He worked at SIR C R REDDY College of engineering, Eluru.westgodavari.AP as Assistant Professor in the department of electrical Engineering. He is presently pursing his PhD from Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology (VNIT),
Nagpur, India .His area of research includes multilevel converters, FACTS and Renewable energy sources
Vijay B. Borghate (M12) born in 1960, received B.E. (Electrical), M.Tech. (Integrated Power System) and Ph.D. from Visvesvaraya Regional College of
Engineering, under Nagpur University Nagpur, India in 1982, 1984 and 2007 respectively. He has worked as engineer during 1984-85 in
Maharashtra state electricity board, India, before joining the Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology (VNIT), then VRCE, Nagpur, India as Lecturer in 1985. Presently, working as an Associate Professor in Electrical Department, in the same institute. His area of research includes resonant converters, multilevel converters.