SimPowerSystems    
Three-Level Bridge

Implement a three-level neutral point clamped (NPC) power converter with selectable topologies and power switching devices

Library

Power Electronics

Description

The Three-Level Bridge block implements a three-level power converter that consists of one, two, or three arms of power switching devices. Each arm consists of four switching devices (Q1 to Q4) along with their antiparallel diodes (D1 to D4) and two neutral clamping diodes (D5 and D6) as shown.

The type of power switching device (IGBT, GTO, MOSFET, or ideal switch) and the number of arms (one, two, or three) are selectable from the dialog box. When the ideal switch is used as the switching device, the Three-Level Bridge block implements an ideal switch bridge having a three-level topology as shown.

Dialog Box and Parameters

Number of bridge arms
Determine the bridge topology: one, two, or three arms.
Snubber resistance Rs
The snubber resistance, in ohms (). Set the Snubber resistance Rs parameter to inf to eliminate the snubbers from the model.
Snubber capacitance Cs
The snubber capacitance, in farads (F). Set the Snubber capacitance Cs parameter to 0 to eliminate the snubbers, or to inf to get a resistive snubber.
For forced-commutated devices (GTO, IGBT, or MOSFET) the Three-Level Bridge block operates satisfactorily with resistive snubbers as long as the firing pulses are sent to the switching devices.
If the firing pulses to forced-commutated devices are blocked, the bridge operates as a diode rectifier. In this condition, you must use appropriate values of Rs and Cs. If the model is discretized, you can use the following formulas to compute approximate values of Rs and Cs:



where







These Rs and Cs values are derived from the following two criteria:

Power electronic device
Select the type of power electronic device to use in the bridge.
Internal resistance Ron
Internal resistance of the selected devices and diodes, in ohms ().
Forward voltages [Device Vf, Diode Vfd]
The forward voltage of the selected devices (for GTO or IGBT only) and of the antiparallel and clamping diodes, in volts.
Measurements
Select All Device currents to measure the current flowing through all the components (Q1 to Q4 and D1 to D6). If the snubber devices are defined, the measured currents are those flowing through the power electronic devices only.
Select Phase-to-neutral and DC voltages to measure the terminal voltages (AC and DC) of the Three-Level Bridge block.
Select All voltages and currents to measure all voltages and currents defined for the Three-Level Bridge block.
Place a Multimeter block in your model to display the selected measurements during the simulation. In the Available Measurement list box of the Multimeter block, the measurement is identified by a label followed by the block name.

Measurement
Label

Device currents for MOSFET, IGBT, and GTO

Device currents for
Ideal Switch, where x = a, b, or c

IQ1x:, IQ2x:, IQ3x:, IQ4x:, ID1x:, ID2x:, ID3x:, ID4x:, ID5x:, ID6x:

or

ISw1x:, ISw2x:, ISw3x:

Terminal voltages

Uan:, Ubn:, Ucn:, Udc+:, Udc-:

Inputs and Outputs

The Pulses input accepts a Simulink-compatible vectorized gating signal containing four pulses (Q1 to Q4) for each arm of the converter. For instance, if a three-arm topology is selected, the input vector must contain twelve pulses and the ordering must be as follows: Q1 of leg A, Q2 of leg A, ..., Q4 of leg C.

Assumptions and Limitations

Turn-on and turn-off times (Fall time, Tail time) of power switching devices are not modeled in the Three-Level Bridge block.

Example

The power_3levelVSC demo illustrates the use of the Three-Level Bridge block in an AC-DC converter consisting of a three-phase IGBT-based voltage sourced converter (VSC). The converter is pulse-width modulated (PWM) to produce a 500 V DC voltage (+/- 250V). In this example the converter chopping frequency is 1620 Hz and the power system frequency is 60 Hz.

The VSC is controlled in a closed loop by two PI regulators in order to maintain a DC voltage of 500 V at the load while maintaining a unity input power factor for the AC supply.

The initial conditions for a steady-state simulation are generated by running an initial simulation to steady state for an integer number of cycles of 60 Hz. The final states (both SimPowerSystems and Simulink controller states) are saved in a vector called xInitial. This vector, as well as the sample times (Ts_Power and Ts_Control) are saved in the power_3levelVSC_xinit.mat file.

When you open this model, the initial condition vector xInitial and the sample times saved in the MAT file are automatically loaded in the workspace. Start the simulation. The monitored signals start in steady state.

Observe the following signals:

At 50 ms, a 200 kW load is switched in. You can see that the dynamic response of the DC regulator to the sudden load variation from 200 kW to 400 kW is satisfactory. The DC voltage reverts to 500 V within 2 cycles and the unity power factor on the AC side is maintained.

At 100 ms, a stop-pulsing signal is activated and the pulses normally sent to the converter are blocked. You can see that the DC voltage drops to 315 V. A drastic change in the primary current waveform can also be observed. When the pulses are blocked, the Three-Level Bridge block operation becomes similar to a three-phase diode bridge.

The following two figures summarize the results of the simulation. The first figure shows the operation of the AC-DC converter during the load variation and when the pulses are blocked.

The second figure shows the current flowing in the various devices of the IGBT bridge when the converter is feeding 500 Vdc to a 200-kW load.

See Also

Multimeter


  Three-Phase Breaker Three-Phase Dynamic Load 

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