Affiliation:
1. Electrical Engineering Department, Federal University of Technology—Paraná, Cornélio Procópio 86300-000, PR, Brazil
2. Electrical Engineering Department, Federal University of Technology—Paraná, Apucarana 86812-460, PR, Brazil
Abstract
Recently, the development of integrated inverters for photovoltaic systems has been widely performed to reduce overall system size, costs, and losses. Thus, integrated inverters have emerged as a prominent solution for replacing two-stage power conversion composed of a step-up converter and a voltage source inverter. Thereby, this paper proposes an integrated inverter topology for single-phase grid-tied photovoltaic systems. The proposed power converter, called a Single-Phase Integrated Zeta Inverter (SP-IZI), can boost the input voltage and inject a sinusoidal and regulated current into the mains with low harmonic distortion. The SP-IZI is based on integrating modified DC-DC Zeta converters, designed and controlled to operate in a discontinuous conduction mode, and presents similarities with the Modified Zeta Inverter (MZI). In this way, this paper compares the main parameters of both topologies and provides a complete study of the SP-IZI, involving both quantitative and qualitative studies as well as a small signals analysis. The feasibility and functionality of the proposed SP-IZI inverter are presented and evaluated through experimental results, which demonstrate that the SP-IZI presents the following advantages compared to the MZI: (i) the voltage in coupling capacitors is 13% lower; (ii) voltage stresses in switches and diodes are 40% lower; and (iii) static gain is similar to the traditional Zeta converter.
Funder
CNPq Brazil
Coordination for the improvement of higher education personnel CAPES Brazil
Subject
Energy (miscellaneous),Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Control and Optimization,Engineering (miscellaneous),Building and Construction
Cited by
1 articles.
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