Capacitor and Switch Size Comparisons on High-Power Medium-Voltage DC-DC Converters with Three-Phase Medium-Frequency Transformer
Journal article, 2021

This paper compares the capacitor requirement of selected isolated DC-DC converters for high-power and medium-voltage applications. A numerical comparison is made for a range of switching frequencies and transition times, considering not only the sub-module capacitors of the converters but also the DC-link capacitors. Likewise, a comparison regarding the semiconductor requirement is performed for the converters. Selected inverter topologies to form the dual-active-bridge (DAB) DCDC converter include the two-level converter (2LC), the modular multi-level converter (MMC), the transition arm converter (TAC), the modular transition arm converter (MTAC), and the controlled transition bridge converter (CTB). The results show that conventional DAB requires the minimum capacitor size among the converters. Moreover, in the appropriate operation region, the MTAC-DAB and the CTB-DAB provide the possibility of up to 40% and 60% reduction in the amount of required energy storage compared to the MMC-DAB, respectively. It is also shown that the size of the DC-link capacitors become comparable with the chain-links’ capacitors when the percentage of the transition times per period is reduced to be below 5%. The comparison regarding the semiconductor requirement revealed that the MMC-DAB requires the smallest installed switch power among the multi-level converters.

medium-frequency transformer (MFT)

three-phase dual-activebridge (DAB)

capacitor sizing

modular multi-level converter (MMC)

DC-DC power conversion

Author

Babak Alikhanzadehalamdari

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering

Yuhei Okazaki

ABB

Torbjörn Thiringer

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering

IEEE Journal of Emerging and Selected Topics in Power Electronics

2168-6777 (ISSN) 2168-6785 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 3 3331-3338 9107225

Power Electronic based dc transformer for off-shore wind energy installations

Swedish Energy Agency (2016-007963), 2017-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.

Areas of Advance

Energy

Subject Categories

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

DOI

10.1109/JESTPE.2020.2999726

More information

Latest update

10/28/2022