
Design and control of a STATCOM based on hybrid cascaded H‐bridge and full‐bridge neutral point clamped multilevel inverter
Author(s) -
Miremad Armin,
Khalaj Monfared Kourosh,
ImanEini Hossein,
Neyshabouri Yousef
Publication year - 2020
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.2020.0726
Subject(s) - h bridge , capacitor , control theory (sociology) , voltage , ac power , inverter , computer science , engineering , topology (electrical circuits) , control (management) , electrical engineering , artificial intelligence
This study presents a STATic synchronous COMpensator (STATCOM) based on hybrid cascaded H‐bridge and full‐bridge neutral point clamped (HC‐FNPC) inverter. The advantages of HC‐FNPC over symmetric and asymmetric cascaded H‐bridge (HB) in STATCOM application are verified in terms of number of power components and voltage balancing capability. A control strategy is proposed to achieve control aims, i.e. reactive current compensation and balancing the voltages of capacitors. HC‐FNPC‐based STATCOM consists of two types of cells, i.e. full‐bridge neutral point clamped (FNPC) and HB cells with one and two capacitors in their DC side, respectively. A hierarchical balancing scheme is proposed to regulate the voltage of capacitors in mixed cells. In the first control layer, the voltage vector of cells is adjusted so that the active power is uniformly distributed among the cells. In the second control layer, the switching redundancies of FNPC are used to provide voltage balancing. The introduced balancing scheme not only provides voltage balance among capacitors, but also distributes the reactive power equally among the cells and increases the reliability in this way. The performance of the proposed control is validated through simulation in MATLAB/SIMULINK environment and experimental results based on a single‐phase nine‐level HC‐FNPC‐based STATCOM laboratory prototype.