Advancing Fault Tolerance & Power Density in Modular Multilevel Converters via Innovative Circuit Design/Control Strategies
Advancing Fault Tolerance and Power Density in Modular Multilevel Converters through Innovative Circuit Design and Control Strategies
Modular Multilevel Converters (MMCs) are pivotal in high-voltage applications such as HVDC transmission, renewable energy integration, and medium-voltage motor drives due to their modularity and superior controllability compared to conventional power conversion topologies. However, the bulky and costly capacitors in conventional submodules (SMs) of MMCs pose significant challenges in terms of volume, weight, and efficiency, often accounting for more than 50% of the converter’s weight and 80% of its volume.
In this talk, Dr. Jinia Roy will present a novel SM circuit incorporating the Active Power Decoupling (APD) technique to address these limitations through advanced control and circuit design. The proposed APD-SM architecture operates on the principle of redistributing ripple power—predominantly at the line and twice the line frequency—into a dedicated decoupling path. This circuit provides a parallel route for oscillatory current components, effectively offloading stress from the main capacitor and enabling a significant reduction in its size.
The APD-SM enables up to a sevenfold reduction in capacitor size while maintaining voltage ripple within acceptable limits. Additionally, it inherently reduces fault current, circulating current, and allowing for a more compact arm inductor design. The presentation will delve into the theoretical foundations, impedance-based analysis, and control strategies that validate the effectiveness of the APD-SM.
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- Co-sponsored by Tanvi Nagarale
Speakers
Jinia Roy of University of Wisconsin-Madison
Advancing Fault Tolerance and Power Density in Modular Multilevel Converters through Innovative Circuit Design and Contr
Modular Multilevel Converters (MMCs) are pivotal in high-voltage applications such as HVDC transmission, renewable energy integration, and medium-voltage motor drives due to their modularity and superior controllability compared to conventional power conversion topologies. However, the bulky and costly capacitors in conventional submodules (SMs) of MMCs pose significant challenges in terms of volume, weight, and efficiency, often accounting for more than 50% of the converter’s weight and 80% of its volume.
In this talk, Dr. Jinia Roy will present a novel SM circuit incorporating the Active Power Decoupling (APD) technique to address these limitations through advanced control and circuit design. The proposed APD-SM architecture operates on the principle of redistributing ripple power—predominantly at the line and twice the line frequency—into a dedicated decoupling path. This circuit provides a parallel route for oscillatory current components, effectively offloading stress from the main capacitor and enabling a significant reduction in its size.
The APD-SM enables up to a sevenfold reduction in capacitor size while maintaining voltage ripple within acceptable limits. Additionally, it inherently reduces fault current, circulating current, and allowing for a more compact arm inductor design. The presentation will delve into the theoretical foundations, impedance-based analysis, and control strategies that validate the effectiveness of the APD-SM.
Biography:
Jinia Roy is Thomas A. Lipo Assistant Professor at UW Madison and an Associate Director of Wisconsin Electric Machines and Power Electronics Consortium (WEMPEC). Before joining UW Madison, she was with GE Research, Niskayuna, NY and with the NREL, Golden, Colorado for 6 years. Throughout her career she has worked on various government and business funded projects related to WBG based PV inverters, grid integration of renewable energy, pulsating power buffer, and pulsed power converter for medical, defense, and fusion applications. She is currently leading a DoD funded effort on development of light weight high efficiency power management for space applications.
Prof. Roy has been serving as the Regional Distinguished Lecturer for IEEE PELS since 2024. She was the recipient of the 2019 IEEE PELS Prize Ph.D. Thesis Talk. She also was the recipient of the IEEE/PEDES’96 Award for the Best Thesis in Power Electronics from IIT Kanpur, 2013 and two Best Paper Presentation Awards at ‘IEEE IECON 2014’ and ‘APEC 2017’.
Address:United States
Agenda
5:50 pm - Webex opens to all, informal/virtual networking, introductions
6:00 pm - Distinguished Lecture Talk begins
7:00 pm - End of talk, Begin Q&A
7:30 pm - Conclusion of event and formal vote of thanks to the speaker
All times are EST/EDT
An IEEE Southeastern Michigan Power Electronics Chapter event. Open to all
Media
| MMC RDL talk - Flyer | MMC RDL talk - Flyer | 362.79 KiB |