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One-cycle control of three-phase active power filter with vector operation
Chongming Qiao   Taotao Jin   Smedley, K.M.  
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of California, Irvine, CA, USA;

This paper appears in: Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publication Date: April 2004
Volume: 51,  Issue: 2
On page(s): 455- 463
ISSN: 0278-0046
INSPEC Accession Number: 7964601
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/TIE.2004.825223
Current Version Published: 2004-04-05

Abstract
Active power filters (APFs) provides an effective measure to eliminate the power line harmonic/reactive currents generated by nonlinear loads or by distributed energy sources that are connected to the grid. Active power filters are typically connected in parallel to the harmonic/reactive current sources and cancel the harmonic/reactive components in the line current so that the current flow into and from the grid is sinusoidal and in phase with the grid voltage. Since the APFs process only the harmonic/reactive power, their power-handling capability can be much higher than that of the cascade power-factor-correction methods. In this paper, the one-cycle control method is extended to control three-phase APFs. The proposed control approach employs one integrator with reset along with several logic and linear components to control a voltage-source converter to achieve three-phase unity power factor for the current to and from the power grid. No multipliers or sensors for the load current and the APF inductor current are required. Furthermore, there is no need to calculate the reference for controlling APF inductor current so that complicated digital computation is eliminated. The operation switching frequency is constant that is desirable for industrial applications. The proposed control approach features great simplicity, excellent harmonic/reactive current cancellation, and solid stability. It is a cost-effective solution for power quality control for electronic equipment, buildings, industrial facilities, ships, airplanes, distributed power generation stations, etc. All findings are supported by experimental results.

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