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Search Results (902)

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Keywords = constant power load

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38 pages, 1529 KB  
Article
Optimizing Control Chain Latency in Liquid Cooled Data Center for Load Responsive Operation
by Haotian Shi, Song Pan, Kaiyan Liu, Taocheng Wan, Chao Li and Baolian Niu
Buildings 2026, 16(9), 1752; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16091752 - 28 Apr 2026
Viewed by 101
Abstract
High power servers are accelerating adoption of cold plate liquid cooling in data centers, but control-chain latency and thermal inertia can delay regulation after load changes and trigger transient swings that threaten temperature stability. This study develops a delay-aware Modelica model for a [...] Read more.
High power servers are accelerating adoption of cold plate liquid cooling in data centers, but control-chain latency and thermal inertia can delay regulation after load changes and trigger transient swings that threaten temperature stability. This study develops a delay-aware Modelica model for a liquid cooled data center and validates it against measured operating conditions. To compare control options, a standardized percentage step-test protocol is proposed with three indicators—dynamic response time, dynamic fluctuation amplitude, and dynamic fluctuation ratio. Step-response simulations evaluate three single actuator strategies (constant differential pressure valve control, primary side variable flow pumping, and cooling tower outlet temperature control), and a combined condition database is built for coordinated pump–fan control with operating-point matching. Valve control responds fastest (38.3–41.3 s) but produces the largest fluctuations; variable flow pumping is smoother with response times of 44.2–72.9 s; and cooling tower temperature control is most stable but slowest (684–826 s). The optimized combined strategy reallocates control authority across operating conditions, reducing response time from 688.3 s to 73.7 s and lowering dynamic temperature swing risk by up to 1.3 °C. These results support load-responsive, plant-level transient-safe operation of liquid-cooled data-center cooling plants, particularly for secondary-side supply temperature control. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
14 pages, 6935 KB  
Article
Design of a Low-Noise Constant-Current Driver for Precision Electronic Systems Application
by Yinuo Sun, Bin Jiang, Ming Li and Rong Shu
Electronics 2026, 15(9), 1831; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15091831 - 26 Apr 2026
Viewed by 127
Abstract
Low-noise and high-stability constant-current drivers are critical components in precision electronic and optoelectronic systems, as current fluctuations directly limit the achievable system performance. This work presents a low-noise constant-current driver based on a current-sensing architecture combined with a parameters adjustable closed-loop control scheme, [...] Read more.
Low-noise and high-stability constant-current drivers are critical components in precision electronic and optoelectronic systems, as current fluctuations directly limit the achievable system performance. This work presents a low-noise constant-current driver based on a current-sensing architecture combined with a parameters adjustable closed-loop control scheme, enabling effective suppression of current noise over a wide frequency range. The electrical performance of the proposed driver is first characterized at the circuit level. At an output current of 300 mA, a current noise spectral density of 15.22 nA/Hz@1kHz is achieved, corresponding to an integrated RMS current noise of 942.88 nA over the 1 Hz–1 MHz bandwidth and a relative current fluctuation of 4.6 ppm. To further evaluate system-level performance, the driver is tested using a laser-based load, where current-induced noise is converted into measurable phase and frequency fluctuations through optical beat-note operation.The experimental results demonstrate that this design effectively suppresses current-induced noise and improves system stability. Owing to its low noise performance, this design provides a practical solution for precision electronic and optoelectronic applications requiring low-noise current power supply. Full article
23 pages, 2749 KB  
Article
Embedded Real-Time Implementation of a Two-Diode Model Photovoltaic Emulator Using dSPACE for Hardware Validation
by Flavius-Maxim Petcut, Anca-Adriana Petcut-Lasc and Valentina Emilia Balas
Electronics 2026, 15(8), 1765; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15081765 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 219
Abstract
This paper presents the design, implementation, and experimental validation of a real-time embedded photovoltaic (PV) emulator based on the two-diode model, using a dSPACE DS1103 platform for hardware validation. The proposed system aims to accurately reproduce the electrical behavior of PV modules under [...] Read more.
This paper presents the design, implementation, and experimental validation of a real-time embedded photovoltaic (PV) emulator based on the two-diode model, using a dSPACE DS1103 platform for hardware validation. The proposed system aims to accurately reproduce the electrical behavior of PV modules under varying environmental conditions, including irradiance and temperature variations. The emulator architecture combines a lookup-table-based modelling approach with a programmable DC power source, enabling deterministic real-time execution and efficient implementation. A multi-level control structure is employed, integrating inner-loop regulation, model-based reference generation, and feedback control to ensure accurate tracking of the PV current–voltage (I–V) characteristics. Experimental results demonstrate that the emulator achieves high accuracy, with an approximation error of approximately 1.2% under standard operating conditions. The system exhibits stable dynamic behavior characterized by a time constant of approximately 0.5 s, with performance maintained across different sampling intervals and load conditions. Additional simulations confirm that the two-diode model preserves high accuracy over a temperature range of 15–60 °C, with deviations below 2%. The results highlight that the two-diode model provides an optimal trade-off between modelling accuracy and computational complexity for real-time embedded applications. The proposed emulator offers a flexible and reliable platform for laboratory validation of photovoltaic behavior and provides the foundation for future testing of maximum power point tracking (MPPT) algorithms, power electronic converters, and embedded control strategies under controlled conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Embedded Systems and Microcontroller Smart Applications)
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23 pages, 6792 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Dielectric Endurance of Nano-Additive Reinforced Polyester Composites via Hankel-RPCA Decomposition
by Mete Pınarbaşı, Fatih Atalar and Aysel Ersoy
Polymers 2026, 18(8), 992; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18080992 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 277
Abstract
Surface discharge-induced degradation poses a significant threat to the operational reliability of high-voltage insulation systems. This research investigates the dielectric endurance of polyester-based nanocomposites reinforced with seven distinct nano-additives: iron oxide (Fe3O4), copper oxide (CuO), titanium oxide (TiO2 [...] Read more.
Surface discharge-induced degradation poses a significant threat to the operational reliability of high-voltage insulation systems. This research investigates the dielectric endurance of polyester-based nanocomposites reinforced with seven distinct nano-additives: iron oxide (Fe3O4), copper oxide (CuO), titanium oxide (TiO2), aluminum oxide (Al2O3), silicon dioxide (SiO2), zinc borate (ZnB) and graphene oxide (GO). Specimens were fabricated at 0.5% and 0.75% weight concentrations and subjected to constant AC electrical stress of 4.5 kV at 50 Hz until failure using the first-plane tracking method. To accurately monitor the aging process, a sophisticated signal processing framework involving Hankel-matrix-enhanced Robust Principal Component Analysis (RPCA) was developed to extract high-frequency discharge features from captured leakage current signals. The degradation characteristics were quantified using various statistical metrics, including Kurtosis, RMS and Burst Discharge Index (BDI). Experimental findings demonstrate that the incorporation of nanoparticles significantly extends the time-to-failure compared to neat polyester, although the effectiveness is highly dependent on both additive type and concentration. At 0.5 wt.%, ZnB exhibited the superior performance in delaying carbonized track formation. However, at 0.75 wt.%, Al2O3 emerged as the most effective additive, achieving a maximum endurance time of 31.61 min. In contrast, certain additives like TiO2 showed a performance decline at higher loadings, likely due to nanoparticle agglomeration. The Hankel-RPCA methodology successfully isolated discharge-specific signatures from background noise, establishing a strong correlation between signal features and material failure stages. This study confirms that the synergy between advanced nanomaterial modification and robust signal processing provides an effective diagnostic tool for monitoring insulation health, offering a vital pathway for the designing of high-performance dielectrics for real-world power system applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Resin Additives—Spices for Polymers, 2nd Edition)
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32 pages, 11336 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Dynamic Response and Power Quality Performance in Type-3 Fuzzy Logic Controlled PWM Rectifiers
by Resul Coteli, Murat Uyar and Ardashir Mohammadzadeh
Electronics 2026, 15(8), 1639; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15081639 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 321
Abstract
In three-phase PWM rectifiers, abrupt load changes and parameter variations challenge DC-bus voltage regulation and degrade the performance of conventional controllers. To ensure robust regulation under nonlinear and time-varying conditions, this study proposes a type-3 fuzzy logic controller (T3-FLC) for DC-bus voltage regulation. [...] Read more.
In three-phase PWM rectifiers, abrupt load changes and parameter variations challenge DC-bus voltage regulation and degrade the performance of conventional controllers. To ensure robust regulation under nonlinear and time-varying conditions, this study proposes a type-3 fuzzy logic controller (T3-FLC) for DC-bus voltage regulation. The T3-FLC enhances the conventional type-1 framework by employing a three-dimensional membership structure that captures both vertical and horizontal uncertainties in the fuzzy inference process. This structure improves adaptability and stability in the face of system disturbances. The proposed controller was compared with a conventional proportional-integral (PI) controller and a type-1 fuzzy logic controller (T1-FLC) under different operating conditions: constant reference, reference tracking, load variation, regenerative operation, and grid disturbances. Under reference tracking mode, it settles within approximately 12 ms for the largest reference step, with the overshoot kept below 0.3%, whereas the T1-FLC and PI controllers require noticeably longer settling times and exhibit higher overshoot. In regenerative operation, the T3-FLC maintains tight DC-bus regulation with recovery times of 10–12 ms and an overshoot of about 2.7%, outperforming the benchmark controllers. Power quality analysis further shows that the proposed controller maintains low input-current distortion, with THD approximately 5–13%, and a near-unity power factor across all scenarios. These results confirm the T3-FLC as an effective control strategy for power converters. Full article
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20 pages, 12696 KB  
Article
Adaptive Talkative Power in High-Frequency Bidirectional Boost Converters
by S. Ali Mousavi, Ali Masoudian and Mohammad Hassan Khooban
Automation 2026, 7(2), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/automation7020060 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 260
Abstract
This paper presents an adaptive talkative power (TP) framework that enables simultaneous high-efficiency power transfer and reliable data communication under time-varying load conditions. A high-frequency TP-based bidirectional boost converter employing a SiC-based zero voltage switching–quasi square wave (ZVS-QSW) topology is proposed, incorporating closed-loop [...] Read more.
This paper presents an adaptive talkative power (TP) framework that enables simultaneous high-efficiency power transfer and reliable data communication under time-varying load conditions. A high-frequency TP-based bidirectional boost converter employing a SiC-based zero voltage switching–quasi square wave (ZVS-QSW) topology is proposed, incorporating closed-loop online efficiency optimization. Data transmission is realized through adaptive switching-frequency modulation at the transmitter, allowing information encoding while preserving optimal power transfer efficiency. To support reliable data detection under unknown and non-constant load conditions, an adaptive receiver architecture is developed that extracts information from output voltage ripple variations induced by frequency modulation. Owing to the nonlinear and complex nature of the ripple characteristics, a supervised machine-learning-based classification approach is employed for data detection, eliminating the need for prior knowledge of converter parameters and overcoming the limitations of conventional maximum-likelihood detection methods. The proposed system is validated through real-time simulations using a dSPACE MicroLabBox system in conjunction with MATLAB/Simulink R2025b. Simulation results demonstrate power transfer efficiencies approaching 98% while enabling reliable and efficient data transmission across a wide range of operating conditions, including varying conversion ratios and dynamic load variations, thereby confirming the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed TP-based power and data transmission scheme. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Automation in Energy Systems)
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41 pages, 4529 KB  
Article
Probabilistic Modeling of Available Transfer Capability with Dynamic Transmission Reliability Margin for Renewable Energy Export and Integration
by Uchenna Emmanuel Edeh, Tek Tjing Lie and Md Apel Mahmud
Energies 2026, 19(8), 1864; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19081864 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 827
Abstract
This paper develops a probabilistic Available Transfer Capability (ATC) framework that quantifies export headroom for renewables across transmission-distribution interfaces under time-varying uncertainty. Static transmission reliability margins can unnecessarily curtail exports. A dynamic transmission reliability margin (TRM) is embedded within ATC using rolling window [...] Read more.
This paper develops a probabilistic Available Transfer Capability (ATC) framework that quantifies export headroom for renewables across transmission-distribution interfaces under time-varying uncertainty. Static transmission reliability margins can unnecessarily curtail exports. A dynamic transmission reliability margin (TRM) is embedded within ATC using rolling window statistics and adaptive confidence factor scheduling to release capacity in calm periods and tighten margins during volatile transitions. Uncertainty is modeled as net nodal power imbalance variability from load and renewable deviations, together with stochastic thermal limit fluctuations. Correlated multivariate scenarios are generated via Latin Hypercube Sampling with Iman-Conover correlation preservation and propagated through full AC power flow analysis. Validation on the IEEE 39-bus system and New Zealand’s HVDC inter-island corridor recovers 93.31 MW of usable transfer capacity on the IEEE system relative to the pooled Monte Carlo P95 constant-margin baseline, with 78.11 MW attributable to rolling window volatility tracking and 15.20 MW to adaptive confidence factor scheduling, and 59.51 MW (+7.6%) on the New Zealand corridor relative to the corresponding pooled Monte Carlo P95 baseline, with the gain arising primarily from rolling window volatility tracking. Relative to a 95% one-sided reliability target, achieved coverage is 93.9% for IEEE and 91.8% for New Zealand, translating into increased export headroom and reduced curtailment. Full article
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21 pages, 21555 KB  
Data Descriptor
Dataset on Fatigue Results and Fatigue Fracture Initiation Site Characterization in Stress-Relieved PBF-LB/M Ti-6Al-4V Four-Point Bend and Axial Specimens: Part I (High Power, Variable Scan Velocities)
by Brett E. Ley, Austin Q. Ngo and John J. Lewandowski
Data 2026, 11(4), 81; https://doi.org/10.3390/data11040081 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 440
Abstract
As part of a NASA University Leadership Initiative (ULI) program, this work supports the continued development and evaluation of a fatigue-based process window for stress-relieved Ti-6Al-4V specimens produced via laser powder bed fusion (PBF-LB/M). Four-point bend and axial fatigue specimens were fabricated by [...] Read more.
As part of a NASA University Leadership Initiative (ULI) program, this work supports the continued development and evaluation of a fatigue-based process window for stress-relieved Ti-6Al-4V specimens produced via laser powder bed fusion (PBF-LB/M). Four-point bend and axial fatigue specimens were fabricated by NASA ULI collaborators across a range of scan velocities (800–2000 mm/s) at a constant power of 370 W using an EOS M290 system. All fatigue specimens were low-stress-ground by a commercial vendor and tested at Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) under load-controlled cyclic loading at a stress ratio of R = 0.1. This paper presents a curated dataset linking PBF-LB/M process parameters to fatigue outcomes across 175 specimens. Of these, 136 fractured and this study includes fatigue crack initiation site identification and defect morphology metrics derived from post mortem SEM analysis. Specimens that reached runout (107 cycles) and did not fracture under subsequent fatigue testing are retained in the dataset, with fractographic fields marked as ‘NA’ to indicate non-applicability. The dataset includes specimen metadata, processing parameters, fatigue life data, fatigue initiation site classification (e.g., keyhole, gas-entrapped pore (GeP), lack-of-fusion (LoF), contamination), defect size and shape descriptors, and spatial location relative to the free surface. These data are intended to support defect-based fatigue life prediction, probabilistic modeling, process–structure–property studies, and machine learning frameworks linking process parameters to fatigue performance in PBF-LB/M Ti-6Al-4V. Full article
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19 pages, 4189 KB  
Article
A Precision Operational Amplifier with eTrim-Based Offset Calibration and Two-Point Temperature Drift Trim
by Yongji Wu and Weiqi Liu
Electronics 2026, 15(7), 1529; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15071529 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 518
Abstract
This work introduces a trimming technique based on eTrim technology to minimize both the input-referred offset voltage and its temperature drift in the operational amplifiers. The proposed low-voltage op-amp utilizes the body effect to maintain a constant bandwidth across the rail-to-rail input common-mode [...] Read more.
This work introduces a trimming technique based on eTrim technology to minimize both the input-referred offset voltage and its temperature drift in the operational amplifiers. The proposed low-voltage op-amp utilizes the body effect to maintain a constant bandwidth across the rail-to-rail input common-mode range under low supply voltages. During input common-mode transitions, the current in the folded cascode stage remains stable, ensuring a robust output stage. Furthermore, a specialized gain-boosting structure enhances the low-frequency gain while preventing occasional latch-up during low-voltage power-up. A pin-multiplexing scheme is employed for trimming data input, thereby eliminating the need for dedicated trimming pins and mitigating post-package parameter variations. At room temperature, a constant-current injection mechanism reduces the DC offset to microvolt levels. At high temperature, temperature-compensated current injection cancels the first-order drift component. Implemented in a low-voltage operational amplifier, post-layout simulation results demonstrate that with a 100-pF capacitive load, the amplifier achieves a gain–bandwidth product exceeding 10 MHz, a low-frequency gain greater than 140 dB, and an input-referred noise of 2.54 µVp-p for the P-channel input and 3.95 µVp-p for the N-channel input. The trimming process reduces the residual offset to the microvolt range and effectively suppresses offset drift, ensuring accurate offset compensation across the specified temperature range. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microelectronics)
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26 pages, 2747 KB  
Article
Experimental Investigation of Industrial Scale Wraparound Loop Heat Pipes for Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning System Application
by Agung Tjiptadi, Khrisna Weda Pratama, Adlan Muhammad Faras, Wisnu Indrawan, Arif Rahman, Sholahudin and Nasruddin Nasruddin
Energies 2026, 19(7), 1729; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19071729 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 439
Abstract
This study experimentally investigates the thermal performance of wraparound loop heat pipes (WLHP) using R134a as the working fluid and copper tubing with an outer diameter of 8.5 mm. A dedicated experimental apparatus was developed to evaluate thermal resistance under varying heat loads [...] Read more.
This study experimentally investigates the thermal performance of wraparound loop heat pipes (WLHP) using R134a as the working fluid and copper tubing with an outer diameter of 8.5 mm. A dedicated experimental apparatus was developed to evaluate thermal resistance under varying heat loads (200–500 W), inclination angles (15° and 30°), and coolant temperatures (5–15 °C) at a constant coolant flow rate of 3.2 L/min. Key performance metrics, including evaporator wall temperature and overall thermal resistance, were analyzed to identify optimal operating conditions. The results reveal that increasing the heat load significantly reduces thermal resistance, reaching a minimum of 0.056 °C/W at 500 W. An inclination angle of 30° improved heat transfer, lowering the evaporator temperature by approximately 5 °C compared to 15°. Moreover, lower coolant temperatures enhanced the temperature gradient between the evaporator and condenser, further improving heat transfer. Principal component analysis (PCA) was employed for dimensionality reduction and identification of the dominant thermal variables affecting system performance. Based on the experimental dataset, a regression model was developed to predict thermal resistance, achieving a coefficient of determination of R2 = 0.96. These findings confirm the WLHP’s potential as an efficient and reliable passive thermal management system for medium- to high-power applications in tropical and industrial environments. Full article
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21 pages, 1156 KB  
Article
Automatic Under-Frequency Load Shedding with Sensitivity to Associated Load Type
by Josué D. Builes-Quintero, Andrés F. Ángel-Ciro, Santiago Bustamante-Mesa and Sergio D. Saldarriaga-Zuluaga
Electricity 2026, 7(2), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/electricity7020029 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
The increasing penetration of low-inertia renewable energy sources and distributed generation has significantly reduced system inertia, making frequency stability a critical challenge in modern power systems. Traditional Under-Frequency Load Shedding (UFLS) schemes often fail to adapt to varying operating conditions and load behaviors, [...] Read more.
The increasing penetration of low-inertia renewable energy sources and distributed generation has significantly reduced system inertia, making frequency stability a critical challenge in modern power systems. Traditional Under-Frequency Load Shedding (UFLS) schemes often fail to adapt to varying operating conditions and load behaviors, leading to either insufficient or excessive disconnections. This paper presents an optimization-based UFLS scheme that integrates dynamic simulations in DIgSILENT PowerFactory with Python programming through the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) algorithm. The proposed methodology optimizes key UFLS parameters—frequency thresholds, intentional delays, and load-shedding percentages—under different ZIP load model configurations (constant power, constant current, and constant impedance). Simulation results on the IEEE 39-bus test system demonstrate that the type of load model has a significant impact on frequency recovery performance and the total amount of load shed. The constant power model achieved system stability with the lowest load disconnection, whereas the constant impedance model required a greater amount of shedding to restore nominal frequency. The results validate the effectiveness of the proposed optimization tool and highlight the importance of considering load characteristics in UFLS design to enhance operational reliability and resilience in modern power systems. Full article
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22 pages, 6654 KB  
Article
PDA-Decorated MXene Nanosheets Lead to Elevated Dielectric Performances in PVDF Nanocomposites
by Guoqing Yang, Siyu Zhao, Na Lin, Jiahuan Zhao, Haoyu Zhang, Panpan Zhao and Wenying Zhou
Nanoenergy Adv. 2026, 6(2), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/nanoenergyadv6020013 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 292
Abstract
As a prospective two-dimensional conductive filler, titanium carbide (MXene) can remarkably boost the dielectric constant (ε) of polymer composites at low loadings. Nevertheless, the accompanied large dielectric loss (tan δ) and leakage current greatly limit their practical applications in [...] Read more.
As a prospective two-dimensional conductive filler, titanium carbide (MXene) can remarkably boost the dielectric constant (ε) of polymer composites at low loadings. Nevertheless, the accompanied large dielectric loss (tan δ) and leakage current greatly limit their practical applications in dielectric-related fields. To tackle this dilemma, an organic polydopamine (PDA) shell was coated on an MXene surface via a self-polymerization method, and the dielectric properties of PDA-modified MXene/poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) were explored. The findings show that, in comparison to unmodified MXene/PVDF, MXene@PDA/PVDF retains a high ε and improved breakdown strength (Eb). It further realizes a notable decrease in both tan δ and electrical conductivity. The introduced PDA interlayer serves to effectively separate adjacent MXene nanosheets, which inhibits the development of conductive paths and introduces charge traps to restrict carrier migration, thus reducing tan δ. Further, the interlayer not only improves the interfacial compatibility, but also mitigates strong dielectric mismatch between MXene and PVDF, which facilitates the homogeneous redistribution of the local electric field, contributing to enhanced Eb. Theoretical fitting and simulation studies unlock the profound polarization mechanisms and charge migration modulated by the PDA interlayer. The resulting Mxene@PDA/PVDF exhibits concurrently elevated ε (35.68) and enhanced Eb (12.94 kV/mm), as well as low tan δ (0.34) at 103 Hz and 7 wt% filler loading, which is not achievable in neat MXene/PVDF. This work demonstrates that core–shell interfacial engineering offers an effective strategy for designing flexible polymer dielectrics with superior dielectric performances, showcasing potential applications in energy storage, advanced power systems and flexible electronics. Full article
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27 pages, 4264 KB  
Article
A Fast Integral Terminal Sliding Mode Buck Converter with a Fixed-Time Observer for Solar-Powered Livestock Smart Collars
by Shiming Zhang, Haochen Ouyang, Shengqiang Shi, Guichang Fang, Zhen Wang, Xinnan Du and Boyan Huang
Agriculture 2026, 16(7), 746; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16070746 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 485
Abstract
Fully maintenance-free smart collars for range cattle, sheep and deer must survive years of uncontrolled grazing under highly variable shade and motion conditions. This paper presents an ultra-low-power buck converter governed by a fast integral terminal sliding mode controller (FITSMC) with a fixed-time [...] Read more.
Fully maintenance-free smart collars for range cattle, sheep and deer must survive years of uncontrolled grazing under highly variable shade and motion conditions. This paper presents an ultra-low-power buck converter governed by a fast integral terminal sliding mode controller (FITSMC) with a fixed-time observer. A new reaching law retains the initial sliding manifold and a negative-power term maintains the constant switching gain to preserve robustness near the surface while attenuating chattering without widening the bandwidth. The fixed-time observer estimates the irradiance and load changes and provides a feed-forward correction, tightening the output regulation regardless of initial conditions. Load step tests with moderate resistance swings showed the proposed method recovers noticeably faster and exhibits slightly lower overshoot than a recent method based on a two-phase power reaching law, while visible inductor current spikes are also suppressed. Simulations under daily grazing profiles confirmed tight output regulation adequate for microwatt data logging and periodic long-range (LoRa) bursts. The sleep mode quiescent current remained in the 9 microamps range, eliminating the need for manual recharge across multi-season field deployments. By integrating robust power electronics with collar-grade solar harvesting, the circuit offers a truly maintenance-free energy path for untethered livestock wearables and supports sustainable precision agriculture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Artificial Intelligence and Digital Agriculture)
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19 pages, 6909 KB  
Article
Dynamic Modeling and Simulation of Shipboard Microgrid Systems for Electromagnetic Transient Analysis
by Seok-Il Go and Jung-Hyung Park
Electronics 2026, 15(7), 1367; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15071367 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 389
Abstract
In this paper, the dynamic modeling and integrated simulation of a ship microgrid system designed to enhance power quality and energy efficiency in electric propulsion vessels are proposed. The proposed system consists of a photovoltaic (PV) array, a battery energy storage system (BESS), [...] Read more.
In this paper, the dynamic modeling and integrated simulation of a ship microgrid system designed to enhance power quality and energy efficiency in electric propulsion vessels are proposed. The proposed system consists of a photovoltaic (PV) array, a battery energy storage system (BESS), a diesel generator, and a propulsion system, all of which are organically integrated through power conversion devices. To compensate for the intermittent nature of solar power, a control strategy featuring Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) for the PV system and bidirectional DC/DC converter control for the battery was implemented. Specifically, a control logic to stabilize the system output in response to the fluctuating loads of the electric propulsion system was developed using PSCAD (v50) software. The simulation results demonstrate that the proposed control strategy maintains DC-link voltage deviation within ±1.8% and achieves a settling time of less than 0.8 s while optimizing propulsion efficiency (peak-shaving ratio 25–30%) under both constant and variable speed operating conditions. Battery SOC variation is limited to 18–88%, preventing overcharge or discharge. This research provides a foundational framework for the design of energy management systems (EMSs) and grid stability assessments for future eco-friendly electric propulsion ships. Full article
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25 pages, 3467 KB  
Article
Large-Signal Stability Enhancement for FIS: Criterion-Based Parameter Optimization and Power Differentiation Feedforward Control
by Chunzhi Ge, Huajun Zheng, Xufeng Yuan, Wei Xiong, Chao Zhang and Zhiyang Lu
Electronics 2026, 15(6), 1283; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15061283 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 261
Abstract
Flexible interconnection systems (FISs) improve distribution flexibility, yet they remain vulnerable to pronounced nonlinear instability and potentially severe DC-link voltage collapse during large disturbances such as constant power load (CPL) surges. Conventional linear control methods are often unable to prevent deep transient voltage [...] Read more.
Flexible interconnection systems (FISs) improve distribution flexibility, yet they remain vulnerable to pronounced nonlinear instability and potentially severe DC-link voltage collapse during large disturbances such as constant power load (CPL) surges. Conventional linear control methods are often unable to prevent deep transient voltage dips under these conditions. To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel large-signal stability criterion based on mixed potential function (MPF) theory. Unlike conventional Lyapunov-based approaches, the proposed formulation explicitly incorporates the dynamics of the DC capacitor, thereby enabling the derivation of a closed-form stability boundary. On this basis, the proportional gains of the outer voltage loop are first optimized to guarantee an adequate static stability margin. Subsequently, a power differentiation feedforward control strategy is developed. Rather than passively counteracting transients, the proposed method dynamically adjusts the DC voltage reference according to the rate of change in power, thereby actively reshaping the transient trajectory. In this way, the simple PI control framework is preserved while avoiding the heavy computational burden associated with advanced methods such as model predictive control. Simulation results show that the proposed strategy increases the permissible CPL step power by 8.7%, from 92 kW to 100 kW. Moreover, under severe load surges and weak grid conditions, the method prevents voltage collapse and maintains the transient trajectory above the practical 600 V safe-operation threshold. This computationally efficient strategy significantly improves the robustness and continuity of operation of practical FISs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Power Electronics)
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