Hysteretic self-oscillating bandpass current mode control for Class D audio amplifiers driving capacitive transducers

Author(s):  
Dennis Nielsen ◽  
Anold Knott ◽  
Michael A. E. Andersen
Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 55
Author(s):  
Nicholas Hawkins ◽  
Bhagyashri Bhagwat ◽  
Michael L. McIntyre

In this paper, a nonlinear controller is proposed to manage the rotational speed of a full-variable Squirrel Cage Induction Generator wind turbine. This control scheme improves upon tractional vector controllers by removing the need for a rotor flux observer. Additionally, the proposed controller manages the performance through turbulent wind conditions by accounting for unmeasurable wind torque dynamics. This model-based approach utilizes a current-based control in place of traditional voltage-mode control and is validated using a Lyapunov-based stability analysis. The proposed scheme is compared to a linear vector controller through simulation results. These results demonstrate that the proposed controller is far more robust to wind turbulence than traditional control schemes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (11) ◽  
pp. 1450142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed M. Al-Hindawi ◽  
Abdullah Abusorrah ◽  
Yusuf Al-Turki ◽  
Damian Giaouris ◽  
Kuntal Mandal ◽  
...  

Photovoltaic (PV) systems with a battery back-up form an integral part of distributed generation systems and therefore have recently attracted a lot of interest. In this paper, we consider a system of charging a battery from a PV panel through a current mode controlled boost dc-dc converter. We analyze its complete nonlinear/nonsmooth dynamics, using a piecewise model of the converter and realistic nonlinear v–i characteristics of the PV panel. Through this study, it is revealed that system design without taking into account the nonsmooth dynamics of the converter combined with the nonlinear v–i characteristics of the PV panel can lead to unpredictable responses of the overall system with high current ripple and other undesirable phenomena. This analysis can lead to better designed converters that can operate under a wide variation of the solar irradiation and the battery's state of charge. We show that the v–i characteristics of the PV panel combined with the battery's output voltage variation can increase or decrease the converter's robustness, both under peak current mode control and average current mode control. We justify the observation in terms of the change in the discrete-time map caused by the nonlinear v–i characteristics of the PV panel. The theoretical results are validated experimentally.


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