학술논문

Dynamics of a series-connected two-motor five-phase drive system with a single-inverter supply
Document Type
Conference
Source
Fourtieth IAS Annual Meeting. Conference Record of the 2005 Industry Applications Conference, 2005. Industry Applications Conference Industry Applications Conference, 2005. Fourtieth IAS Annual Meeting. Conference Record of the 2005. 2:1081-1088 Vol. 2 2005
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Robotics and Control Systems
Computing and Processing
Machine windings
Stator windings
Marine vehicles
Propulsion
Machine vector control
Inverters
Acceleration
Motor drives
Aerospace engineering
Variable speed drives
Language
ISSN
0197-2618
Abstract
Utilization of multi-phase machines in variable speed drives is nowadays extensively considered for electric ship propulsion, 'more-electric aircraft' and traction applications, including EVs and HEVs. In addition to well-known advantages, use of multi-phase machines enables independent vector control of a certain number of machines that are connected in series in an appropriate manner, with the supply coming from a single voltage source inverter (VSI). The concept was initially proposed for a five-phase series-connected two-motor drive, but is applicable to any system phase number greater than or equal to five. The number of connectable machines is a function of the VSI phase number and detailed theoretical and simulation studies have already been reported for various multi-phase multi-motor drive configurations of this type. However, the available experimental proofs of decoupled dynamic control within series-connected drive systems are currently restricted to the six-phase two-motor drive. The purpose of this paper is to present, for the first time, results of an experimental study on a five-phase two-motor series-connected drive system. A brief overview of the operating principles is provided first This is followed by a description of the experimental rig. The emphasis in the paper is placed on the experimental results, which illustrate dynamics of the vector-controlled two-motor drive during acceleration, deceleration and speed reversal. An experimental proof of the existence of decoupled dynamic control is thus provided.