oscillatory current
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Author(s):  
Salman Hajiaghasi ◽  
Ahmad Salemnia ◽  
Mohsen Hamzeh

Increasing nonlinear loads and power electronic converters lead to various power quality issues in microgrids (MGs). The interlinking converters (ILCs) can participate in these systems to harmonic control and power quality enhancement. However, ILC participation deteriorates the dc link voltage, system stability, and storage lifetime due to oscillatory current phenomena. To address these problems, a new control strategy for a hybrid energy storage system (HESS) is proposed to eliminate the adverse effects of the harmonic control operation of ILC. Specifically, battery and super-capacitor (SC) are used as HESSs that provide low and high power frequency load, respectively. The proposed strategy tries to compensate the current oscillation imposed by ILC with fuzzy control of HESS. In this method, a proportional-resonant (PR) controller integrated with harmonic compensator (HC) is employed to control the ILC for power quality enhancement and oscillatory current elimination. The main advantages of the proposed strategy are to reduce DGs power fluctuations, precise DC bus voltage regulation for generation and load disturbances, improved grid power quality under nonlinear load and transition conditions. The performance of the proposed method for isolated and grid-connected modes is verified using simulation studies in the MATLAB software environment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (14) ◽  
pp. 1950202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lianghui Qu ◽  
Lin Du ◽  
Honghui Zhang ◽  
Zilu Cao ◽  
Zichen Deng

To explore the feasibility of physiological manipulation of autaptic structures, the effects of autaptic connections on an FHN-ML neuronal system with phase noise stimulation are studied systematically. Firstly, according to the dynamic analysis of the FHN-ML neuron model, a saddle-node bifurcation can occur on an invariant circle. Under the action of external oscillatory current with phase noise, the neuronal firing activity is sensitive to phase noise with less intensity, and an appropriate noise intensity can induce a significant stochastic resonance phenomenon. Secondly, the chemical autaptic function can effectively regulate the neuronal discharge activity. An inhibitory autapse can not only induce the transition from depolarized resting to periodic spiking, but can also induce the FHN-ML neuron suppressed by strong phase noise to generate a pronounced intermittent high-level burst-like discharge mode when the autaptic conductance is greater than 0.1. Finally, for a two-dimensional regular FHN-ML neuronal network, a small amount of autaptic structures can induce some special waveforms to restore the propagation of nerve impulses interrupted by phase noise disturbance. This indicates the significant regulation of autapses on spatial patterns of the FHN-ML neuronal network. The study can provide some theoretical guidance for building autaptic structures in local areas to modulate the dynamic behaviors of biological neuronal systems.


Author(s):  
Jungao Wang ◽  
Rohan Shabu Joseph ◽  
Muk Chen Ong ◽  
Jasna Bogunović Jakobsen

A free-hanging riser (FHR) is a typical riser configuration seen in the disconnected drilling riser, the water-intake riser, and the deep-sea mining riser. In offshore productions, these marine risers will move back and forth in water and further generate an equivalent oscillatory current around themselves, due to the vessel motions. Both in full-scale marine operations and model tests, it has been reported that such oscillatory current leads to riser vortex-induced vibration (VIV) and therefore causes structural fatigue damage. Recently, there have been some attempts to numerically predict vessel motion-induced VIV on the compliant production risers, with emphasize on relatively large Keulegan–Carpenter (KC) numbers. In the real marine operations, the risers experience small KC number scenarios during most of their service life. Therefore, the investigation of vessel motion-induced VIV under small KC number is of great significance, especially considering its contribution to the fatigue damage. In this paper, numerical investigation of VIV of a FHR attached to a floating vessel is carried out. A new response frequency model for vessel motion-induced VIV under small KC numbers is proposed and implemented in vivana. Validation of the proposed numerical methodology is performed against the published experimental results, where a good agreement is achieved.


2019 ◽  
Vol 166 (15) ◽  
pp. A3620-A3630
Author(s):  
Marveh Forghani ◽  
Julien McCarthy ◽  
Scott W. Donne

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimiya Narikiyo ◽  
Hiroyuki Manabe ◽  
Yoshihiro Yoshihara ◽  
Kensaku Mori

Olfactory perception depends on respiration phases: olfactory cortex processes external odor signals during inhalation whereas it is isolated from the external odor world during exhalation. Olfactory cortex pyramidal cells receive the sensory signals via bottom-up pathways terminating on superficial layer (SL) dendrites while they receive top-down inputs on deep layer (DL) dendrites. Here we asked whether olfactory cortex pyramidal cells spontaneously change the action modes of receiving olfactory sensory inputs and receiving top-down inputs in relation to respiration phases. Current source density analysis of local field potentials recorded in three different olfactory cortex areas of waking immobile rats revealed β- and γ-range fast oscillatory current sinks and a slow current sink in the SL during inhalation, whereas it showed β- and γ-range fast oscillatory current sinks and a slow current sink in the DL during exhalation. Sensory deprivation experiments showed that inhalation-phased olfactory sensory inputs drove the inhalation-phased fast oscillatory potentials in the SL but they drove neither the inhalation-phased slow current sink in the SL nor the exhalation-phased slow current sink in the DL. The results indicate that independent of inhalation-phased olfactory sensory inputs, olfactory cortex pyramidal cells spontaneously generate a slow depolarization in the SL dendrites during inhalation, which may selectively boost the concomitant olfactory sensory inputs to elicit spike outputs. In addition, the pyramidal cells spontaneously generate slow depolarization in the DL dendrites during exhalation, which may assist top-down inputs to elicit spike outputs. We thus hypothesize that the olfactory cortical areas coordinately perform inhalation/exhalation-phased switching of input biasing: inhalation phase is the time window for external odor signals that arrive in the SL dendrites, whereas exhalation phase is assigned to boost top-down signals to the DL dendrites that originate in higher brain centers.


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