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Design of a power converter robust to grid perturbations. Stefano Rossini. TE-EPC-MPC. February 2014. Outline. Grid perturbations and LHC Topology for a new power converter Choice of the modulation technique Simulation results Conclusions. Grid perturbations and LHC.
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Design of a power converter robust to grid perturbations Stefano Rossini TE-EPC-MPC February 2014
Outline • Grid perturbations and LHC • Topology for a new power converter • Choice of the modulation technique • Simulation results • Conclusions
Grid perturbations and LHC • Grid perturbations and LHC • Electrical grid • Grid perturbations in LHC • Beam trips statistics • Concerned circuits and power converters • Requirements for a new power converter
RTE/EDF 400kV Electrical grid 90 MVA 110 MVA 90 MVA 110 MVA 90 MVA 66kV 18kV 18kV 18kV LHC 2,4,6,8 LHC 1 5 x 38 MVA 70 MVA 18kV 18kV … P.C. 2 MVA P.C. 0.4kV Permanent operating conditions • EDF 400kV grid: • CERN 18kV grid: • CERN 0.4kV grid: 4
Electrical grid • Grid transients (both 18kV and 0.4kV) as demanded by CERN electrical grid specification (EDMS #113154) • Over-voltages (voltage swells) • Slow: during 10ms • Surge: (peak) during 0.2ms • Under-voltages (voltage drops) • during 100ms • Most voltage drops due to lightning strikes ( summer). 5
Grid perturbations in LHC Warm magnetstrip during grid perturbations With respect to nominal grid 18kV grid • Data taken from • “Power converters of circuits monitored by FMCM”, H. Thiesen, 03.04.2012, \\cern.ch\dfs\Departments\TE\Groups\EPC\Projects\LHC\Consolidation_RPTG\Hugues\1. LHC FMCM Power Converters(1).pptx. 6
Beam dumps made by FMCM • Most (24 over 29) beam trips due to grid perturbations • More than half of these (14 over 24) are only causedby FMCM(Fast Magnet Current Change Monitor) Data taken from (based on measurements in year 2012) MPP Workshop March 2013, http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceOtherViews.py?view=standard&confId=227895, Ivan Romera Ramirez, http://indico.cern.ch/getFile.py/access?contribId=34&sessionId=7&resId=1&materialId=slides&confId=227895 7
FMCM beam trips • RD1 and RD34 magnets are responsible for most of the beam trips occurring in LHC • RPTGpower converters replacement is necessary • RD1.LR5 is the most problematic(90% of the EL FMCM trips due only to RD1/RD34) Data taken from (based on measurements over 2010 - 2012) MPP Workshop March 2013, http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceOtherViews.py?view=standard&confId=227895, Ivan Romera Ramirez, http://indico.cern.ch/getFile.py/access?contribId=34&sessionId=7&resId=1&materialId=slides&confId=227895 8
Concerned circuits and power converters Point 5 Beams collision Point 3 Point 7 Point 4 RF Point 6 Beam dump Beams cleaning Beams cleaning Point 2 Point 8 Point 1 Beams collision 9
RPTG power converter • RPTG power converter not able to ensure constant output current during grid perturbations • New switch-mode power converter in order to continue operation during grid perturbations 10
Requirements for the new power converter • Requirements • Robust to grid perturbations • Transients lasting up to 100ms • Transients of UN voltage step (1ph or 3ph) • Lifetime expectancy: ≥ 15 years of operation • Current ripple in the magnet: ~ 1 ppm (10% of resolution) • 0.9UN • 0.8UN • 100ms 11
Lifetime requirements • 15 years of operation • Estimated 40’500 slow thermal cycles (~ hour) • IGBT/Diode modules suited for “traction” applications • AlSiC baseplate (~10x more cycles capability than Cu) • Only available in 1700V (or higher) • Or avoid baseplate (Semikron SKIIP) 12 Source: Mitsubishi
Technical requirements RPTG RD1.LR1 cycle at 4TeV • Unidirectionnal current: • Minimal output current: (better than RPTG) • no energy recovery required • , 13
Topology for a new power converter • Topology for a new power converter • General structure • Input stage • Output stage • 1Q converters • 4Q converters • Effect of grid perturbation on the DC-link • Choice of the topology 14
Structure of the converter The structure of the converter is widely used in the MPC section and has proven to work well. 15
Analysis methodology • Decoupling of grid perturbations rejection from the load. • Synthesis of the converter split in two: • Input stage ensure minimum DC-link voltage • Output stage perturbation rejection & magnet supply Input stage Output stage 16
Input stage of the converter • Input stage of each module constituted by • 50Hz transformer • AC/DC converter • DC-link coil • DC-link capacitor • AC/DC converter will be a 3-phase diode bridge rectifier • Reliable • Simple • Passive • Ensure sufficient voltage margin on DC-link capacitor 12-pulse diode rectifier 17
Output stage of the converter • Output stage of each module constituted by • DC-link capacitor • DC/DC converter • HF coil • HF capacitors and damping resistor • Equivalent load (warm magnet) • Several “classical” (Hard-switching) topologies are possible • 1Q/2Q converters (series or parallel) • 4Q converters (series or parallel) 18
Output stage: 1 Quadrant topologies (1Q) 1Q series (2 x 350V @ 2 x 405A) 1Q parallel (700V @ 4 x 203A) 350V 700V • Ripple frequency seen by the load: • Not possible because of minimal conduction time of IGBTs • @ 18 A Worse than RPTG 19
Output stage: 4 Quadrants topologies (4Q) • Minimal DC-link voltage • ’ (load requirements) • & • Transformer • Voltage drop in input coil • Switching effect of diodes (empiètement d’anode) • Voltage drop in transformer windings 20
Output stage: 4 Quadrants topologies (4Q) 4Q parallel (700V @ 2 x 405A) 4Q series (2 x 350V @ 810A) 350V 700V at nominal grid: 610 V at nominal grid: 860 V at low grid: 765 V at low grid: 540 V Voltage margin: 158 V (~ 25%) Voltage margin: 12 V (~ 2%) • Not sufficient by itself • Need AFE / Boost / ”UPS” • Simplest working solution 21 (low grid = grid at nominal - 10%)
Simulation method for grid analysis • Transformer replaced by the no-load voltage and short-circuit impedance • Magnet &H-bridge replaced by a current sourcecontrolled to absorb a constant power from the DC link • Evaluate DC-link stability • Evaluate the voltage on the DC-link during grid perturbations 22
DC-link stability • Operation at constant power can be source of instability • Power converter acts as a negative impedance on DC link • Grid perturbation causes oscillations of the input filter • RL damping branch in parallel to main DC coil • HIGHER DC-link voltage Better damping • Reduced undershoot • Better DC-link stability 23
Effect of grid perturbations on DC-link voltage 0.9 UN 0.8 UN DC-link voltage for 4Q series configuration 10% voltage drop on the 3 phases from LOW grid Steady state: Transient (100ms, 3 phases): U20 Critical point 24
Output stage choice: 4Q series Limits of continuity of operation ( / ) 1.10 UNpermanent 1.10 UN 3ph • 100ms 0.80 UN 1.10 UN 1ph • 100ms 0.00 UN 0.90 UN 0.90 UN permanent 3ph • 100ms 0.75 UN 0.90 UN 1ph • 100ms 0.55 UN 25
Output stage choice: 4Q series • Large DC-link voltage margin continuity of operation • Grid perturbation may even last longer than 100ms • Choice of modulation technique 26
Choice of the modulation technique • Choice of the modulation technique • 2-Level PWM • 3-Level PWM with frequency doubling • Comparison & ripple on/in the load 27
2-Level modulation State 2 State 1 Output voltage 28
3-Level modulation with frequency doubling State 4 State 1 State 2 State 3 Output voltage 29
Modulations comparison • 2-Level modulation • Each diagonal of IGBTs is controlled by the same signal • The output voltage is or • The output frequency is • 3-Level with frequency doubling modulation • The output voltage is , 0 or • The output frequency is 30
Gain [dB] Modulations comparison 0 Frequency [Hz] LC output filter Cutoff frequency of the filter ) -40dB / decade For a given filter ( , ) 31
Output filter Magnet modeled as Model established after impedance measurements made on the the of RD1.LR1 / RD34.LR3 circuits Output voltage ripple of the power converter (FSW = 2.5kHz) 10 kHz 32
Output filter • 3L2FSW modulation technique • True output voltage ripple frequency for each sub-converter (interleaving is not perfect) • For a given output filter cutoff frequency the ripple isgreatly attenuated without modifying the dynamic response of the converter.Switching losses not increased! • Zero current stability (small spikes) • Common mode currents (EMC / CEM) 33
Simulation results • Simulation results • Some notes on control • Ripple current in the magnet • Grid perturbations rejection • Contributions of the differents control loops • Insufficient DC-link voltage 34
Control structure Control used to validate grid perturbation rejection 35
Control structure • DC-link compensation: real-time measurement of the DC-link voltage & correction of the duty cycle • Damping loop: (partial) state feedback of the current flowing in the output capacitor in order to simplify the synthesis of the voltage controller & damp oscillations • Voltage loop: PI controller • No offset • Good closed-loop bandwidth (~ 500Hz) 36
System simulation results Ripple current in the magnet Nominal grid in steady-state Assumption before measurements Magnet: 1.8H / 0.8Ω / 10nF 37
System simulation results Grid perturbation rejection Low grid with voltage drop Magnet: 1.8H / 0.8Ω / 10nF 38
System simulation results Grid perturbation rejection High grid with voltage swell Magnet: 1.8H / 0.8Ω / 10nF 39
System simulation results Grid perturbation rejection DC-link FF DC-link FF + VLOOP 40
Severe perturbation: insufficient DC-link voltage 0.9 UN 0.7 UN Severe 3 phase undervoltage U20 Might continue operation If more severe FMCM trip 15mA Continuity of operation sufficient DC-link voltage 41
Conclusions • RPTG replacement in order to improve reliability of LHC • Priority for RD1.LR5 (@CMS) • Switch mode power converter • Continuity of operation requires • Sufficient DC-link voltage Series configuration • DC-Link compensation + VLOOP controller • Low output voltage ripple 3L2FSW modulation 42
Questions Thank you for your attention Questions? 43