Investigation of cascaded H-Bridge multilevel Inverter as Distribution Static Compensator in Power System for compensation of reactive power and harmonics

Author(s):  
Bhushan P. Kadu ◽  
J.A. Khobragade
Author(s):  
Ifra Nabi ◽  
Ishtiyaq Shafi Rafiqi ◽  
Adfar Majid ◽  
Arshid Ali

The purpose of this review paper is to offer an examination of reactive power management in power system. Reactive power gives us the planning actions and operations requested for the improvement of voltage and voltage instability in power networks. This paper identifies the possible ways to reactive power compensation by voltage control to a specific level and improving stability of power system and increasing transmission capacity. The reactive power and steady state voltage in any distribution system could be appropriately managed by harmonizing the available voltage and reactive power control equipments. It begins with a survey of voltage stability and reactive power in the transmission, distribution and load, and the necessity of delivering the reactive power regionally. The illustrations of adopted managing properties of shunt power systems like Static VAR Compensator (SVC) – Static compensators of reactive power, STATCOM – type systems (static compensator), static reactive power generators and systems that combine both these solutions, which are indicated as SVC based on STATCOM were not overlooked.


2020 ◽  
pp. 15-19
Author(s):  
Prabaakaran K ◽  
Senthil Kumar R ◽  
Jain Vinith P R ◽  
Monisha S ◽  
Ranjana Devi S ◽  
...  

This paper proposes the concept of reactive power compensation with the aid of STATCOM (static synchronous compensators) and three phase multilevel inverter. The classification of multilevel inverters under three major types which are H-bridge inverter, flying capacitors-based inverter and diode clamped multilevel inverter. Among these multilevel inverters, the diode clamped type is stressed in this paper due to its capability to process 3-phase output in the absence of any input. Here the reactive power is compensated using 7-level based multilevel inverter with diode clamps are made utilizing the capacitors banks, diodes and switches which would therefore abates the voltage stresses and harmonics resulting in higher efficiency of the power system. Besides the functioning of multilevel inverter, STATCOM is also utilized to improve the regulation of reactive power flow and thereby, enhances the stability under transient condition of a power system. Subsequently, the compensated seven level output is procured by the sinusoidal PWM technique.


Author(s):  
G. Ramya ◽  
V. Ganapathy

<p>The STATCOM is one of the shunt type FACTS controllers which can supply reactive power and improve bus voltage. STATCOM has advantages like transient free switching and smooth variation of reactive power. This paper deals with the comparison of five level and seven level based STATCOM systems. Usually DC output from the PV source is amplified using a single boost converter. The output of the boost converter is applied to the multilevel inverter system. The ability of STATCOM to improve the receiving end voltage is analyzed using the proposed boost converter. The performance of five level and seven level STATCOM systems are compared in terms of THD and receiving end voltage</p>


Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 442
Author(s):  
Marcin Jaraczewski ◽  
Ryszard Mielnik ◽  
Tomasz Gębarowski ◽  
Maciej Sułowicz

High requirements for power systems, and hence for electrical devices used in industrial processes, make it necessary to ensure adequate power quality. The main parameters of the power system include the rms-values of the current, voltage, and active and reactive power consumed by the loads. In previous articles, the authors investigated the use of low-frequency sampling to measure these parameters of the power system, showing that the method can be easily implemented in simple microcontrollers and PLCs. This article discusses the methods of measuring electrical quantities by devices with low computational efficiency and low sampling frequency up to 1 kHz. It is not obvious that the signal of 50–500 Hz can be processed using the sampling frequency of fs = 47.619 Hz because it defies the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem. This theorem states that a reconstruction of a sampled signal is only guaranteed possible for a bandlimit fmax < fs, where fmax is the maximum frequency of a sampled signal. Therefore, theoretically, neither 50 nor 500 Hz can be identified by such a low-frequency sampling. Although, it turns out that if we have a longer period of a stable multi-harmonic signal, which is band-limited (from the bottom and top), it allows us to map this band to the lower frequencies, thus it is possible to use the lower sampling ratio and still get enough precise information of its harmonics and rms value. The use of aliasing for measurement purposes is not often used because it is considered a harmful phenomenon. In our work, it has been used for measurement purposes with good results. The main advantage of this new method is that it achieves a balance between PLC processing power (which is moderate or low) and accuracy in calculating the most important electrical signal indicators such as power, RMS value and sinusoidal-signal distortion factor (e.g., THD). It can be achieved despite an aliasing effect that causes different frequencies to become indistinguishable. The result of the research is a proposal of error reduction in the low-frequency measurement method implemented on compact PLCs. Laboratory tests carried out on a Mitsubishi FX5 compact PLC controller confirmed the correctness of the proposed method of reducing the measurement error.


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