Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter

Worldwide, renewable energy systems are booming with reliable distributed generation (DG) technologies to help fuel increasing global energy consumption and mitigate the corresponding environmental problems. High cost and low efficiency are major problems for such systems using traditional buck inve...

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Main Author: Xue, Yaosuo
Other Authors: Chang, L.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1882/166
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-UNB.1882-1662013-10-22T03:48:28ZAnalysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverterXue, Yaosuodistributed generation (DG) technologiesglobal energy consumptionbuck-boost inverterWorldwide, renewable energy systems are booming with reliable distributed generation (DG) technologies to help fuel increasing global energy consumption and mitigate the corresponding environmental problems. High cost and low efficiency are major problems for such systems using traditional buck inverters with line-frequency transformers. This thesis has proposed a novel single-phase single-stage buck-boost inverter suitable for cost-effective small DG systems. The inverter was analyzed from the angle of energy exchange and transfer with two current control schemes, DCM and CCM. Sinusoidal PWM (SPWM) control method, based on DCM, was discussed in details with steady state analyses, computer simulations, and laboratory tests. A concise model with underlying equations was derived to represent the physical behavior of proposed inverter. Closed-loop SPWM control was simulated and verified to have fast dynamic response and good tracking performance with robustness and insensitivity to dc input fluctuations, ac grid variations, and component parametric uncertainties. Other control strategies were also investigated from the critical DCM, CCM, or energy approach to either increase the fundamental output or further improve the performance. Comparisons demonstrated that SPWM was preferred control method with low output THD, reduced switching losses, and simple implementation. Therefore, it is concluded the proposed inverter provides a low-cost and high-efficient solution for small DG systems with low component count, minimal dc and ac filtering requirements, and improved performance.Chang, L.2004-07-22T18:17:02Z2004Thesis or Dissertation53137 bytes136496 bytes228699 bytes338535 bytes396011 bytes1592531 bytes98499 bytes149855 bytes59117 bytes334006 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1882/166en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic distributed generation (DG) technologies
global energy consumption
buck-boost inverter
spellingShingle distributed generation (DG) technologies
global energy consumption
buck-boost inverter
Xue, Yaosuo
Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
description Worldwide, renewable energy systems are booming with reliable distributed generation (DG) technologies to help fuel increasing global energy consumption and mitigate the corresponding environmental problems. High cost and low efficiency are major problems for such systems using traditional buck inverters with line-frequency transformers. This thesis has proposed a novel single-phase single-stage buck-boost inverter suitable for cost-effective small DG systems. The inverter was analyzed from the angle of energy exchange and transfer with two current control schemes, DCM and CCM. Sinusoidal PWM (SPWM) control method, based on DCM, was discussed in details with steady state analyses, computer simulations, and laboratory tests. A concise model with underlying equations was derived to represent the physical behavior of proposed inverter. Closed-loop SPWM control was simulated and verified to have fast dynamic response and good tracking performance with robustness and insensitivity to dc input fluctuations, ac grid variations, and component parametric uncertainties. Other control strategies were also investigated from the critical DCM, CCM, or energy approach to either increase the fundamental output or further improve the performance. Comparisons demonstrated that SPWM was preferred control method with low output THD, reduced switching losses, and simple implementation. Therefore, it is concluded the proposed inverter provides a low-cost and high-efficient solution for small DG systems with low component count, minimal dc and ac filtering requirements, and improved performance.
author2 Chang, L.
author_facet Chang, L.
Xue, Yaosuo
author Xue, Yaosuo
author_sort Xue, Yaosuo
title Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
title_short Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
title_full Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
title_fullStr Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
title_full_unstemmed Analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
title_sort analysis, simulation, and test of a novel buck-boost inverter
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1882/166
work_keys_str_mv AT xueyaosuo analysissimulationandtestofanovelbuckboostinverter
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