A high-frequency pulsating dc link for electric vehicle drives with reduced losses
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Abstract
This paper proposes a motor drive suitable for electric vehicles (EVs) with notably
reduced losses as compared to conventional drives. The proposed drive feeds the dc-link
with a dynamically reconfigurable battery formed by cascaded half-bridges containing
battery units. The reconfigurable battery concurrently forms a modular multilevel
dc-link able to synthesize variable dc-link voltages, which can adjust the dc link
voltage to run a motor to operate at the optimum load point or even to contribute
to modulation and greatly reduce the switching loss of the main inverter—in this case
a standard two-level three-phase inverter. Up to 2/3 switching actions are avoided
in the main inverter, which can run at maximum duty cycle and fundamental-frequency
commutation. The saved switching effort in the main inverter is shifted to the modular
multilevel dc link, but with much less loss due to the fractionized switching voltage
and the use of field-effect transistors (FETs).
At high drive speeds, the converter halves the total loss compared to a standard inverter
only; at lower speeds and thus smaller modulation indices, the advantage is even more
pronounced because of the dynamically lowered dc-link voltage. Other benefits include
alleviated insulation stress for motor windings and direct battery balancing. The
proposed motor drive is verified on a down-scaled setup with eight modules constituting
the dc link.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23934Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Stefan M Goetz
Assistant Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

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