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Harmonic rejection in current source inverter‐based distributed generation with grid voltage distortion using multi‐synchronous reference frame
Author(s) -
Morsy Ahmed,
Ahmed Shehab,
Massoud Ahmed Mohamed
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
iet power electronics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.637
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1755-4543
pISSN - 1755-4535
DOI - 10.1049/iet-pel.2013.0186
Subject(s) - reference frame , total harmonic distortion , distortion (music) , current (fluid) , inverter , computer science , grid , thd analyzer , frame (networking) , harmonic , rotating reference frame , distributed generation , harmonic analysis , electronic engineering , voltage , control theory (sociology) , electrical engineering , physics , nonlinear distortion , acoustics , engineering , mathematics , telecommunications , renewable energy , artificial intelligence , amplifier , control (management) , bandwidth (computing) , geometry , mechanics
The growing penetration of renewable energy resources and distributed generation (DG) has raised significant interest in power quality issues. Achieving low total harmonic distortion of exported current using low switching frequency inverters such as current source inverters (CSI) is a challenge, especially under conditions of severe utility voltage distortion. This study presents a control structure for a CSI‐based DG system, based on a multi‐synchronous reference frame (MSRF) architecture that rejects the effect of utility voltage distortion and helps attain high‐quality output current. The proposed solution is applicable for low switching frequency inverters with limited passive filter bandwidth. The MSRF architecture presented confines two stages; one for harmonics extraction and another for harmonics rejection. A state‐space‐based stationary frame equivalent model of the proposed MSRF architecture is presented; this substantially reduces the computational load while preserving system performance. Experimental results validate the proposed technique against the conventional harmonic rejection controller.

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