ECE 5671/6671 LAB 6. Wound-Field Synchronous Generators

Similar documents
ECE 5671/6671 Lab 3. Impedance Measurement and Parameter Estimation of a DC Motor

ECE 5670/6670 Project. Brushless DC Motor Control with 6-Step Commutation. Objectives

ECE 5670/ Lab 6. Parameter Estimation of a Brushless DC Motor. Objectives

E x p e r i m e n t 3 Characterization of DC Motor: Part 1

EE 340L Experiment 6: Synchronous Generator - Operation with the Grid

DISCUSSION OF FUNDAMENTALS

Courseware Sample F0

Exercise 3. Doubly-Fed Induction Generators EXERCISE OBJECTIVE DISCUSSION OUTLINE DISCUSSION. Doubly-fed induction generator operation

Electric Power Systems 2: Generators, Three-phase Power, and Power Electronics

ECE 5670/ Lab 5. Closed-Loop Control of a Stepper Motor. Objectives

Electric Drives Experiment 5 Four-Quadrant Operation of a PMDC Motor

EE 340L EXPERIMENT # 3 SYNCHRONOUS GENERATORS

Voltage-Versus-Speed Characteristic of a Wind Turbine Generator

MTE 360 Automatic Control Systems University of Waterloo, Department of Mechanical & Mechatronics Engineering

Generator Operation with Speed and Voltage Regulation

E x p e r i m e n t 2 S i m u l a t i o n a n d R e a l - t i m e I m p l e m e n t a t i o n o f a S w i t c h - m o d e D C C o n v e r t e r

EE 340L Experiment 6: Synchronous Generator - Stand-Alone Operation

Electrical Machines (EE-343) For TE (ELECTRICAL)

SYNCHRONOUS MACHINES

Generator Advanced Concepts

ECE 5670/6670 Lab 7 Brushless DC Motor Control with 6-Step Commutation. Objectives

CHAPTER 4 FUZZY BASED DYNAMIC PWM CONTROL

Feedback Devices. By John Mazurkiewicz. Baldor Electric

Experiment 2 IM drive with slip power recovery

1 INTRODUCTION 2 MODELLING AND EXPERIMENTAL TOOLS

Lab 2: Introduction to Real Time Workshop

Laboratory Investigation of Variable Speed Control of Synchronous Generator With a Boost Converter for Wind Turbine Applications

Lab 1: Steady State Error and Step Response MAE 433, Spring 2012

ME 461 Laboratory #5 Characterization and Control of PMDC Motors

EE 560 Electric Machines and Drives. Autumn 2014 Final Project. Contents

CHAPTER-III MODELING AND IMPLEMENTATION OF PMBLDC MOTOR DRIVE

Active Vibration Isolation of an Unbalanced Machine Tool Spindle

Open Loop Frequency Response

Software User Manual

PMSM Control Using a Three-Phase, Six-Step 120 Modulation Inverter

A COMPARISON STUDY OF THE COMMUTATION METHODS FOR THE THREE-PHASE PERMANENT MAGNET BRUSHLESS DC MOTOR

ESO 210 Introduction to Electrical Engineering

EE2210 Laboratory Project 1 Fall 2013 Function Generator and Oscilloscope

sin(wt) y(t) Exciter Vibrating armature ENME599 1

ME 3200 Mechatronics I Laboratory Lab 8: Angular Position and Velocity Sensors

Implementation of discretized vector control strategies for induction machines

9063 Data Acquisition and Control Interface

Data Acquisition and Control Interface

CHAPTER 3 EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT AND TWO AXIS MODEL OF DOUBLE WINDING INDUCTION MOTOR

Lab E5: Filters and Complex Impedance

PREDICTIVE CONTROL OF INDUCTION MOTOR DRIVE USING DSPACE

Experiment 1.A. Working with Lab Equipment. ECEN 2270 Electronics Design Laboratory 1

Equipment and materials from stockroom:! DC Permanent-magnet Motor (If you can, get the same motor you used last time.)! Dual Power Amp!

New Direct Torque Control of DFIG under Balanced and Unbalanced Grid Voltage

Labs for EGN 3375 Electromechanical Energy Systems at University of South Florida

MSK4310 Demonstration

AC Drive Technology. An Overview for the Converting Industry. Siemens Industry, Inc All rights reserved.

Lab 2b: Dynamic Response of a Rotor with Shaft Imbalance

Type of loads Active load torque: - Passive load torque :-

Using CME 2 with AccelNet

Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Lab 2: Characterization of Lab System Components

GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION APPLICATION FOR ALL PROJECTS WITH AGGREGATE GENERATOR OUTPUT OF MORE THAN 150 KW BUT LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO 550 KW

GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION APPLICATION Category 5 For All Projects with Aggregate Generator Output of More Than 2 MW

CHAPTER 6 UNIT VECTOR GENERATION FOR DETECTING VOLTAGE ANGLE

Constant voltage and Constant frequency operation of DFIG using Lab view FPGA and crio

Step vs. Servo Selecting the Best

Bahram Amin. Induction Motors. Analysis and Torque Control. With 41 Figures and 50 diagrams (simulation plots) Springer

total j = BA, [1] = j [2] total

Analog Devices: High Efficiency, Low Cost, Sensorless Motor Control.

Issued: September 2, 2014 Effective: October 3, 2014 WN U-60 Attachment C to Schedule 152, Page 1 PUGET SOUND ENERGY

Experiment 3. Performance of an induction motor drive under V/f and rotor flux oriented controllers.

Lab 4 An FPGA Based Digital System Design ReadMeFirst

GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION APPLICATION Category 3 For All Projects with Aggregate Generator Output of More Than 150 kw but Less Than or Equal to 550 kw

SPEED CONTROL OF INDUCTION MOTOR WITHOUT SPEED SENSOR AT LOW SPEED OPERATIONS

University of Jordan School of Engineering Electrical Engineering Department. EE 219 Electrical Circuits Lab

Lab 4: PMSM Characterization. EE595S Fall 2005 S.D. Sudhoff

combine regular DC-motors with a gear-box and an encoder/potentiometer to form a position control loop can only assume a limited range of angular

Modeling and Simulation of Induction Motor Drive with Space Vector Control

GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION APPLICATION FOR ALL PROJECTS WITH AGGREGATE GENERATOR OUTPUT OF MORE THAN 2 MW

Electronic Speed Controls and RC Motors

GE 320: Introduction to Control Systems

Speed control of sensorless BLDC motor with two side chopping PWM

IDAHO PURPA GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION REQUEST (Application Form)

The DC Machine Laboration 3

PERMANENT MAGNET SYNCHRONOUS GENERATOR BASED STANDALONE SYSTEM

3.1.Introduction. Synchronous Machines

Placement Paper For Electrical

ENSC 220 Lab #2: Op Amps Vers 1.2 Oct. 20, 2005: Due Oct. 24, 2004

STEADY STATE REACTANCE

2.017 DESIGN OF ELECTROMECHANICAL ROBOTIC SYSTEMS Fall 2009 Lab 4: Motor Control. October 5, 2009 Dr. Harrison H. Chin

Lab Exercise 9: Stepper and Servo Motors

CHAPTER-5 DESIGN OF DIRECT TORQUE CONTROLLED INDUCTION MOTOR DRIVE

THE STUDY OF THE SYNCHRONOUS MOTOR

MICROCONTROLLERS Stepper motor control with Sequential Logic Circuits

A Practical Guide to Free Energy Devices

NORTH CAROLINA INTERCONNECTION REQUEST. Utility: Designated Contact Person: Address: Telephone Number: Address:

CHAPTER 6 THREE-LEVEL INVERTER WITH LC FILTER

Page ENSC387 - Introduction to Electro-Mechanical Sensors and Actuators: Simon Fraser University Engineering Science

EE 410/510: Electromechanical Systems Chapter 5

LAB 4 ADVANCED xpc WITH THE PC/104 STACK

An Induction Motor Control by Space Vector PWM Technique

L E C T U R E R, E L E C T R I C A L A N D M I C R O E L E C T R O N I C E N G I N E E R I N G

Introduction : Design detailed: DC Machines Calculation of Armature main Dimensions and flux for pole. Design of Armature Winding & Core.

UNIT 9 DC Separately-Excited Generator

EE 340L EXPERIMENT # 5.1 SYNCHRONOUS GENERATOR (STAND-ALONE OPERATION)

Transcription:

ECE 5671/6671 LAB 6 Wound-Field Synchronous Generators 1.0 Introduction This lab is designed to explore the characteristics of Wound Field Synchronous Generators (WFSG). The WFSG of this lab is obtained by using a Doubly Fed Induction Generator (DFIG) operating in synchronous mode with constant rotor currents. First, the DFIG is synchronized with the grid as a synchronous generator. Then, the excitation current is varied and the resulting changes in line current and real and reactive powers are observed. Then, the motor torque is varied; the resulting changes in real and reactive powers are observed and the real versus reactive power curve is plotted. 1.1 Lab Objectives The following are the objectives of this lab: - Learn about the basics of WFSGs and how they operate - Learn how to sync a WFSG to the grid - Learn about the relationship between the real power and the torque of the prime mover - Learn about the relationship between the reactive power and the excitation current The following equipment is needed to complete this lab: DC generator, frame mounted, with coupler DFIG generator Grid Connection box dspace I/O box PEDB with ribbon cable and +12V supply Current sensor board Box of cables 2.0 Simulink Model: The Simulink model (lab_6.mdl) is provided in order to capture generated voltages, currents, real power, and reactive power. It will also control the rotor excitation current, prime mover voltage, and grid connection board relay. Figure 1 shows what the model should look like.

Figure 1: Simulink model for Lab 6 Open Matlab and open the provided model. In the MATLAB command prompt, set Ts = 1e-4. Save the.mdl file into the working MATLAB directory as lab_6.mdl. Press CTRL+B to build the system description file for use in dspace. 3.0 dspace Setup: Next, open the dspace.lay file provided to control and capture the experimental data. Begin by opening the dspace Control-Desk software. The provided.lay file should look like figure 2.

Figure 2: dspace.lay file for lab 6 Create a new Project + Experiment framework, choosing the appropriate.sdf file. Select Layouting > Import layout and select the.lay file provided as lab_6.lay. 4.0 Experimental Setup: The following steps need to be followed carefully in order to sync the DFIG to the grid and perform the experiments. - Remember to reference Appendix III of lab #5 when placing components on the desktop - Make sure that the dspace break-out box is well connected to the computer. - Refer to the cable connection table in the appendix when connecting all components. - The current sensor board will be utilized to measure the line current of the DFIG. Connect phase A on the DFIG through the current sensor to phase A on the generator side of the grid connection box (DFIG A current sensor black, current sensor red grid connection box phase A). Connect phase B on the DFIG through the current sensor in the same fashion. Connect DFIG phase C directly to phase C on the grid connection box.

- Connect the BNC from the current sensor channel measuring phase A to ADCH 5 on the dspace I/O box and the channel measuring phase B to ADCH 6. - The three generator voltages will be measured using the dspace ADCH 1, 2, and 3. Use BNC cables to connect generator phases A, B, and C on the grid connection box to ADCH 1, 2, and 3, respectively. (Phases A and B must be monitored on an oscilloscope to verify sequence and compare with the grid phases A and B). Use BNC splitters that will allow the DFIG phases A and B to be connected to ADCH1 and 2 as well as two channels on the oscilloscope simultaneously. - The PEDB will be used to control the DC motor and the excitation current applied to the DFIG rotor windings. In order to measure the excitation current and the current drawn by the DC motor, use two BNC cables to connect the curr. A1 and curr. A2 ports on the inverter board to dspace ADCH 7 and ADCH 8, respectively. - Make sure that the Three Phase Grid power supply is OFF and connect all three phases to the Grid side of the grid connection box using 4 Banana-Banana wires.

- Phases A and B of the grid must be monitored on an oscilloscope. Use two BNC cables to connect the grid phases A and B BNC terminals on the grid connection box to two channels on the oscilloscope. You may replace the recommended cables in the table with regular thick BNC cables from the rack if, during the experiment, there are difficulties seeing the grid phase voltages on the oscilloscope. But keep in mind to return these cables back to the rack. - Connect the DFIG ports Y and Z to the PEDB phases A1 and B1, respectively. (A1 Y, B1 Z). - Connect the DC motor to the PEDB phases A2 and B2, respectively. DC motor (A2 red, B2 black). - dspace will be used to control the relay on the grid connection board via DACH1. Use a BNC cable to connect DACH1 to the relay control terminal on the grid connection box. - Finally, connect the encoder cable to the DC motor encoder output, and connect the other end of the cable to the INC 1 input on the dspace box. - At this stage, you are done with the system connections. Redirect your attention to dspace. - Now, turn on the grid power box. You must be able to see still sine waves of phases A and B of the grid on the oscilloscope. Make sure that the DC regulated power supply is set to 42V. Also, set the current supply of the power supply to maximum value. Turn on the power supply. Begin to increase the speed of the prime mover (Motor_V) in dspace and confirm that the speed is being read into dspace as positive. (If this is not the case, make sure that the inverter gain is placed in-line with the velocity data collection in the Simulink model as shown in figure 1.) While the motor & generator are spinning, the RPM meter in the layout should indicate how fast the motor/generator set are spinning. Increase to 1800 RPM. Next, increase the excitation voltage that is connected to the generator s rotor to roughly 3V. Check the oscilloscope and make sure that you see the phase A sinusoid generated by the DFIG. You should also be able to see phase B generated by the DFIG, but we will concentrate on phase A in the next section. 5.0 Connecting the DFIG to the Grid: - Make absolutely sure that the phase sequence of the DFIG is identical to the Grid s sequence. Use the oscilloscope to verify. Ask the TA to verify your setup and the phase sequence of both the generator and the grid. - View Channel A of the grid side and Channel A of the generator side simultaneously (turn OFF channels for the B phases to avoid distraction during this process). Make

sure that the peak-peak voltage magnitude of the DFIG s generated back EMF matches that of the grid by controlling the rotor excitation voltage. - Make sure that the frequency of the DFIG is slightly higher than the grid s frequency so that, when the generator is connected to the grid, it will be generating a small amount of power. This corresponds to the DFIG rotating slightly faster than 1800 RPM. - When the generator and grid channels overlap, check the relay control box in dspace. This will activate the grid connection relay and the generator will be connected to the grid. - If the signals on the oscilloscope are no longer lined up and the system begins to operate rough, immediately deactivate the grid connection relay in dspace. This is caused by phase mismatch between the generated signals and the grid. Ask your TA for help. - The top left plot above shows the voltage sequence of the DFIG; this is what is expected to be seen during phase verification. - The top right plot shows the grid voltages. It is important that the DFIG and grid have the same phase sequence.

- The bottom plots show the two phase A voltages before and after they are connected. 6.0 Experiments while Varying the Excitation Current (3 Data Sets Obtained): Perform the following experiments after the DFIG is synced to the grid: - Gather data at three different torque (DC motor current) levels (use a different constant DC motor voltage for each one such as 16, 16.5, and 17V). Record data while sweeping the excitation current from 1.8 to 4 Amps. Right click on the excitation voltage numeric input window and change the increment to 0.1 in order to get a smooth increase in measurements. This data can be used to make the following plots: V-Curve: Plot 3 V-curve plots at three different torque levels on the same axes. The V-curve is a plot of the stator current or line current versus rotor current or excitation current. Comment on these plots in your report. Real power vs. excitation current: Plot the real power vs. excitation current for the 3 torque levels on the same plot. Comment on these plots in your report. Reactive power versus excitation current: Plot the reactive power vs. excitation current for the 3 torque levels on the same plot. Comment on these plots in your report. 7.0 Experiments while Varying the DC Motor Current (3 Data Sets Obtained): At this point, the DFIG should still be synced to the grid. - Gather data at three different excitation current levels (2.5, 3, and 3.5A are good values to use). Record data while sweeping the motor current from ~0 to 4 Amps. Right click on the motor voltage numeric input window and change the increment to 0.1 in order to get a smooth increase in measurements. This data can be used to make the following plots: Real power vs. DC motor current: Plot the real power vs. motor current for the 3 excitation current levels on the same plot. Comment on these plots in your report. Reactive power vs. DC motor current: Plot the reactive power vs. motor current for the 3 excitation current levels on the same plot. Comment on these plots in your report. Reactive power vs. real power: Plot the reactive power vs. real power for the 3 excitation current levels on the same plot. Comment on these plots in your report.

Note on captured data: The data captured will be extremely noisy. Use of the following second order Butterworth filter will result in clean data plots: [b,a] = butter(2,1e-4); Variable_Filtered = filtfilt(b,a,variable_to_be_filtered); Report Requirements: Consider this requirement list a guide to what would be viewed as a minimum to submit for your lab report. Always include discussion and comments on procedures, observations, and findings. Describe the objectives of this lab in your own words. Include the equipment number of all major components used Describe the steps that you took to sync the DFIG to the grid Include the following plots with comments in your report (all should have three datasets in one plot) - V-curves - Real power versus excitation current curves - Reactive power versus excitation current curves - Real power vs. DC motor current curves - Reactive power vs. DC motor current curves - Reactive power vs. real power curves Include any irregularities you noticed in the data you collected. Provide a conclusion summarizing the concepts and procedures covered in this lab. (Also, describe what worked well and did not work well in this lab, and make suggestions for possible improvements.)

Appendix I. Cable List Cable No. # Cables/Bundle Colors Length From To #2 4 - banana Y/B/W/G 12 Grid (A/B/C/N) Grid Connect Box (A/B/C/N) #3 2 - banana W/B 12 Grid Connect Box (A/B) gen Current Sensor #4 2 - banana W/B 12 Current Sensor Generator Stator (A/B) #5 1 - banana Y 24 Grid Box (C) Generator Stator (C) #6 3 - banana Y/B/W 24 Hirel Board (A1& B1 only) Rotor (Y& Z only) #7 2 - banana R/Blk 24 Hirel Board (A2& B2) DC Motor Terminals(+/-) #8 2 - banana R/Blk 32 Power Supply(+/-) Hirel Board (+/-) #9 3 - BNC W/B/Y 24 Grid Connect Box (A/B/C) gen dspace (ADCH 1&2&3) w/ T #12 2 - BNC W/B 32 dspace (ADCH 1 & 2) w/ T Oscilloscope #10 1 - BNC Blk 24 dspace (DACH 1) Grid Connect Box Relay #15 3 - BNC W/B/Y 24 Grid Connect Box (A/B) grid Oscilloscope #11 2 - BNC W/B 32 Current Sensor Board (A/B) dspace (ADCH 5 & 6) #13 1 - BNC B 32 Hirel (curr. A1) dspace (ADCH 7) #14 1 - BNC R 32 Hirel (curr. A2) dspace (ADCH 8)