Abstract |
Cascaded H-bridge Converters (CHBs) are a promising solution in converting power from a three-phase medium voltage of 6.6kV...30kV to a lower DC-voltage in the range of 100V...1kV to provide pure DC power to applications such as electrolyzers for hydrogen generation, data centers with a DC power distribution and DC microgrids. CHBs can be interpreted as modular multilevel converters with an isolated DC-DC output stage per module, require a large DC-link capacitor for each module to handle the second harmonic voltage ripple caused by the fluctuating input power within a fundamental grid period. Without a zero-sequence voltage injection, star-connected CHBs are operated with approximately sinusoidal arm voltages and currents. The floating star point potential enables to utilize different zero-sequence voltage injection techniques such as a third-harmonic injection with 1/6 of the grid voltage amplitude or a Min-Max voltage injection. Both well-known methods have the advantage to reduce the peak arm voltage and thereby the number of required modules by 13.4\% (to v3/2). This paper proves analytically that the third-harmonic injection with1/6 of the grid voltage amplitude reduces the second harmonic voltage ripple by only 15.1\% compared to no-voltage injection for unity power factor operation and balanced grid voltages. Then it is shown, that the Min-Max injection has the often overlooked advantage of reducing the second harmonic voltage ripple by even 18.8\% . By applying the here proposed zero-sequence voltageinjection in saturation modulation, the second harmonic voltage ripple of the DC-link capacitors is reduced by even 24.3\%, while still requiring the same number of modules as the Min-Max injection. For a realistic number of reserve modules, the overall energy ripple in the DC-link capacitors is reduced by 40\%. |