Hardware-in-the-Loop Implementation of ROMAtrix, a Smart Transformer for Future Power Grids
Author:
Ostadrahimi Amir1ORCID, Bifaretti Stefano1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Industrial Engineering, Tor Vergata University of Rome, Via Cracovia n.50, 00133 Rome, Italy
Abstract
The evolution of power generation brings about extensive changes in other parts of the grid, especially in the transmission and distribution components. Within the scope of the Internet of Energy (IoE), electric power flows more flexibly between different parts of the grid. DC power will play an essential role in IoE. Decentralized photovoltaic panels, energy storage, electric vehicle charging stations, and data centers are some of the significant components of future grids dealing with DC power. As a result, power transformers must be appropriately modified to manage power among the different parts of the grid. A power electronic transformer (PET), also known as a solid-state transformer (SST) or smart transformer (ST), is a solution enabling a power grid to deal with this growing complexity. ROMAtrix, as a matrix-converter-based ST, is a developing project targeting future power grids. ROMAtrix realizes the application of a medium voltage (MV) transformer using commercially available power electronic semiconductors. Due to the distinctive features of ROMAtrix and a high number of switches, the implementation of the control system using a single control board is highly demanding. This paper aims to illustrate the implementation, on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), of pulse width modulation (SVMPWM) applied to the ROMAtrix, considering specific switching patterns. The proposed switching procedure was simulated with PLECS and validated with the hardware-in-the-loop using the OPAL-RT solver.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Control and Optimization,Mechanical Engineering,Computer Science (miscellaneous),Control and Systems Engineering
Reference49 articles.
1. A Review on Microgrids’ Challenges Perspectives;Saeed;IEEE Access,2021 2. Davis, M.W. (2002, January 21–25). Distributed resource electric power systems offer significant advantages over central station generation and T & D power systems Part II. Proceedings of the IEEE Power Engineering Society Transmission and Distribution Conference, Chicago, IL, USA. 3. Microgrid Protection Challenges and Mitigation Approaches–A Comprehensive Review;Altaf;IEEE Access,2022 4. Granata, S., Di Benedetto, M., Terlizzi, C., Leuzzi, R., Bifaretti, S., and Zanchetta, P. (2022). Power Electronics Converters for the Internet of Energy: A Review. Energies, 15. 5. Bifaretti, S., Bonaiuto, V., Pipolo, S., Terlizzi, C., Zanchetta, P., Gallinelli, F., and Alessandroni, S. (2021). Power Flow Management by Active Nodes: A Case Study in Real Operating Conditions. Energies, 14.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|