Analysis and Suppression of Zero-Sequence Circulating Current in Multi-Parallel Converters

Author(s):  
Jun-Hyung Jung ◽  
Sante Pugliese ◽  
Marius Langwasser ◽  
Marco Liserre
2014 ◽  
Vol 704 ◽  
pp. 161-169
Author(s):  
Jirawut Benjanarasut ◽  
Bunlung Neammanee

The direct paralleled converters can increase the power rating, reliability, efficiency, as well as decrease the cost and current/voltage ripples which are suitable for high power converters. However, when converters are in direct parallel, the circulating currents will be generated automatically. This will result in high current distortion which causes the line inductors saturation and damage the power switches; and therefore overall performance of the system will be degraded. This paper purposes a zero sequence current control technique to reduce the circulating current in directly parallel line-side converter of the wind energy conversion system. The case studies are carried out on a 2 MW wind turbine to investigate the effects of non-identical line inductors and PWM carrier phase shift of each converter to the circulating current. The simulation results confirm that zero sequence current controllers that can reduce the zero sequence current in any conditions. The dynamic responses of the direct parallel converters and a single converter are nearly the same but the direct parallel converters have better current ripple and THDi.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 1703 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Han ◽  
Xiaoli Wang ◽  
Baochen Jiang ◽  
Jingru Chen

In microgrids, paralleled converters can increase the system capacity and conversion efficiency but also generate zero-sequence circulating current, which will distort the AC-side current and increase power losses. Studies have shown that, for two paralleled three-phase voltage-source pulse width modulation (PWM) converters with common DC bus controlled by space vector PWM, the zero-sequence circulating current is mainly related to the difference of the zero-sequence duty ratio between the converters. Therefore, based on the traditional control ideal of zero-vector action time adjustment, this paper proposes a zero-sequence circulating current suppression strategy using proportional–integral quasi-resonant control and feedforward compensation control. Firstly, the dual-loop decoupled control was utilized in a single converter. Then, in order to reduce the amplitude and main harmonic components of the circulating current, a zero-vector duty ratio adjusting factor was initially generated by a proportional–integral quasi-resonant controller. Finally, to eliminate the difference of zero-sequence duty ratio between the converters, the adjusting factor was corrected by a feedforward compensation link. The simulation mode of Matlab/Simulink was constructed for the paralleled converters based on the proposed control strategy. The results verify that this strategy can effectively suppress the zero-sequence circulating current and improve power quality.


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