Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach

The power requirements for future spacecraft power systems will be on the order of a few hundred kilowatts to a few megawatts. Because of these power levels, a high-voltage, high-power distribution subsystem may be utilized to transmit power from the source to the different loads. Using current stat...

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Main Author: Nelms, Robert Mark
Other Authors: Electrical Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53653
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-536532020-12-12T05:31:18Z Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach Nelms, Robert Mark Electrical Engineering LD5655.V856 1987.N445 DC-to-DC converters Space vehicles -- Electric propulsion systems The power requirements for future spacecraft power systems will be on the order of a few hundred kilowatts to a few megawatts. Because of these power levels, a high-voltage, high-power distribution subsystem may be utilized to transmit power from the source to the different loads. Using current state-of-the-art power conditioning electronics, complex series and parallel configurations will be required at the interface between the source and the distribution subsystem and between the distribution subsystem and the loads. The dynamic response of such a spacecraft power system may be obtained using a general purpose program such as SPICE2. However, for large and complex spacecraft power systems, the input file will be large and complex with correspondingly large computation times. As an alternative, the spacecraft power system can be considered as an interconnection of modular components. Each component is treated as a two-port network, and a state model is written with the port voltages as the inputs. The state model of each component is solved using the state transition matrix and assuming that the port voltages are . clamped for each time step. This calculation proceeds as if all two-port networks are decoupled. After the state variables have been updated, the inputs to all components are calculated using network analysis principles. The solution procedure alternates between solving the dynamic model of all components and the network equations for the component inputs. The modular state variable approach and SPICE2 are compared using two example systems. This comparison shows the advantages of the modular state variable approach. First, for the modular state variable approach the system is considered as an interconnection of modular components. In SPICE2, the system is treated as an interconnection of circuit elements. As a result, the system description for large and complex spacecraft power systems is much _ larger and more complex than a modular state variable description. Secondly, the modular state variable approach requires less CPU time than SPICE2. For one of the example systems presented here, the modular state variable approach uses one-twentieth of the CPU time used by SPICE2. Ph. D. 2015-06-24T13:35:28Z 2015-06-24T13:35:28Z 1987 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53653 en_US OCLC# 16853139 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ viii, 96 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1987.N445
DC-to-DC converters
Space vehicles -- Electric propulsion systems
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1987.N445
DC-to-DC converters
Space vehicles -- Electric propulsion systems
Nelms, Robert Mark
Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
description The power requirements for future spacecraft power systems will be on the order of a few hundred kilowatts to a few megawatts. Because of these power levels, a high-voltage, high-power distribution subsystem may be utilized to transmit power from the source to the different loads. Using current state-of-the-art power conditioning electronics, complex series and parallel configurations will be required at the interface between the source and the distribution subsystem and between the distribution subsystem and the loads. The dynamic response of such a spacecraft power system may be obtained using a general purpose program such as SPICE2. However, for large and complex spacecraft power systems, the input file will be large and complex with correspondingly large computation times. As an alternative, the spacecraft power system can be considered as an interconnection of modular components. Each component is treated as a two-port network, and a state model is written with the port voltages as the inputs. The state model of each component is solved using the state transition matrix and assuming that the port voltages are . clamped for each time step. This calculation proceeds as if all two-port networks are decoupled. After the state variables have been updated, the inputs to all components are calculated using network analysis principles. The solution procedure alternates between solving the dynamic model of all components and the network equations for the component inputs. The modular state variable approach and SPICE2 are compared using two example systems. This comparison shows the advantages of the modular state variable approach. First, for the modular state variable approach the system is considered as an interconnection of modular components. In SPICE2, the system is treated as an interconnection of circuit elements. As a result, the system description for large and complex spacecraft power systems is much _ larger and more complex than a modular state variable description. Secondly, the modular state variable approach requires less CPU time than SPICE2. For one of the example systems presented here, the modular state variable approach uses one-twentieth of the CPU time used by SPICE2. === Ph. D.
author2 Electrical Engineering
author_facet Electrical Engineering
Nelms, Robert Mark
author Nelms, Robert Mark
author_sort Nelms, Robert Mark
title Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
title_short Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
title_full Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
title_fullStr Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
title_full_unstemmed Simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
title_sort simulation of spacecraft power systems using a modular state variable approach
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53653
work_keys_str_mv AT nelmsrobertmark simulationofspacecraftpowersystemsusingamodularstatevariableapproach
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