Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
707751 European Journal of Control 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper, the problem of controlling the speed of AC machines in four quadrants is revisited from a completely new viewpoint, based on the idea of powering an AC machine with a synchronous generator that generates a variable-voltage–variable-frequency supply. This is a natural, mathematical, but not physical, extension of the conventional Ward Leonard drive systems for DC machines to AC machines. As a result, AC drives can be regarded as generator-motor systems, which facilitate the analysis of AC drives and the introduction of other special functions because a system consisting of a generator and a motor is easier to be handled than the conventional AC drive that consists of an inverter and a motor. Control strategies, with and without a speed sensor, are proposed to implement this idea and the experimental results are presented to demonstrate the feasibility.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Control and Systems Engineering
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