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Keywords = multi-resonant converter

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15 pages, 5416 KB  
Article
Acoustic Metamaterial Nanogenerator for Multi-Band Sound Insulation and Acoustic–Electric Conversion
by Xinwu Liang and Ming Yuan
Sensors 2025, 25(21), 6693; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25216693 (registering DOI) - 2 Nov 2025
Abstract
Controlling low-frequency noise and achieving multi-band sound insulation remain significant challenges and have long been hot topics in industrial research. This study introduces a novel multifunctional device based on the principles of acoustic metamaterials, which not only offers high-performance sound insulation but also [...] Read more.
Controlling low-frequency noise and achieving multi-band sound insulation remain significant challenges and have long been hot topics in industrial research. This study introduces a novel multifunctional device based on the principles of acoustic metamaterials, which not only offers high-performance sound insulation but also converts low-frequency acoustic energy into electrical energy. Through an innovative design featuring multiple local resonance design, the proposed device effectively mitigates the impact of pre-tension on the membrane, while enabling efficient multi-band sound insulation that can be finely tuned by adjusting structural parameters. Experimental results demonstrate that the device achieves a maximum sound insulation of 40 dB and an average sound insulation exceeding 25 dB within the 1000 Hz frequency range. Moreover, by utilizing its local resonance property, a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) is specifically designed for low-frequency acoustic–electric conversion, maintaining high performance low-frequency sound insulation while simultaneously powering small scale electronic devices. This work provides a promising approach for multi-band sound insulation and low-frequency acoustic–electric conversion, offering broad potential for industrial applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Nanogenerators for Micro-Energy and Self-Powered Sensors)
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26 pages, 2244 KB  
Review
Analysis and Mitigation of Wideband Oscillations in PV-Dominated Weak Grids: A Comprehensive Review
by Runzhi Mu, Yuming Zhang, Xiongbiao Wan, Deng Wang, Tianshu Wen, Zichao Zhou, Liming Sun and Bo Yang
Processes 2025, 13(11), 3450; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13113450 - 27 Oct 2025
Viewed by 268
Abstract
The rapid global expansion of photovoltaic (PV) generation has increased the prevalence of PV-dominated weak-grid systems, where wideband oscillations (WBOs) pose a significant challenge to secure and reliable operation. Unlike conventional electromechanical oscillations, WBOs originate from inverter control loops and multi-inverter interactions, spanning [...] Read more.
The rapid global expansion of photovoltaic (PV) generation has increased the prevalence of PV-dominated weak-grid systems, where wideband oscillations (WBOs) pose a significant challenge to secure and reliable operation. Unlike conventional electromechanical oscillations, WBOs originate from inverter control loops and multi-inverter interactions, spanning sub-Hz to kHz ranges. This review provides a PV-focused and mitigation-oriented analysis that addresses this gap. First, it clarifies the mechanisms of WBOs by mapping oscillatory drivers such as phase-locked loop dynamics, constant power control, converter–grid impedance resonance, and high-frequency switching effects to their corresponding frequency bands, alongside their engineering implications. Second, analysis methods are systematically evaluated, including eigenvalue and impedance-based models, electromagnetic transient simulations, and measurement- and data-driven techniques, with a comparative assessment of their strengths, limitations, and practical applications. Third, mitigation strategies are classified across converter-, plant-, and system-levels, ranging from adaptive control and virtual impedance to coordinated PV-battery energy storage systems (BESS) operation and grid-forming inverters. The review concludes by identifying future directions in grid-forming operation, artificial intelligence (AI)-driven adaptive stability, hybrid PV-BESS-hydrogen integration, and the establishment of standardized compliance frameworks. By integrating mechanisms, methods, and mitigation strategies, this work provides a comprehensive roadmap for addressing oscillatory stability in PV-dominated weak grids. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI-Driven Advanced Process Control for Smart Energy Systems)
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16 pages, 254 KB  
Review
Advanced Neuroimaging and Emerging Systemic Therapies in Glioblastoma: Current Evidence and Future Directions
by Ilona Bar-Letkiewicz, Anna Pieczyńska, Małgorzata Dudzic, Michał Szkudlarek, Krystyna Adamska and Katarzyna Hojan
Biomedicines 2025, 13(11), 2597; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13112597 - 23 Oct 2025
Viewed by 468
Abstract
Despite technological progress, glioblastoma (GBM) continues to confer dismal prognoses. Modern neuroimaging methods are assuming an ever greater role in diagnosing and monitoring brain tumors. This review shows current neuroimaging approaches and systemic therapeutic strategies for glioblastoma, with a focus on emerging and [...] Read more.
Despite technological progress, glioblastoma (GBM) continues to confer dismal prognoses. Modern neuroimaging methods are assuming an ever greater role in diagnosing and monitoring brain tumors. This review shows current neuroimaging approaches and systemic therapeutic strategies for glioblastoma, with a focus on emerging and innovative treatments. Advances in multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging—MRI (diffusion, perfusion, and spectroscopy) and novel positron emission tomography (PET) tracers, complemented by radiomics and artificial intelligence (AI), now refine tumor delineation, differentiate progression from treatment effects, and may help predict treatment responses. Maximal safe resection followed by chemoradiotherapy with temozolomide remains the standard, with the greatest benefit seen in O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter-methylated tumors. Bevacizumab and other targeted modalities offer mainly progression-free, not overall survival, gains. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (e.g., nivolumab) have not improved survival in unselected GBM, while early multi-antigen CAR-T (chimeric antigen receptor T-cell) strategies show preliminary bioactivity without established durability. While actionable alterations (NTRK fusions and BRAF V600E) justify selective targeted therapy trials, their definitive benefit in classical GBM is unproven. Future priorities include harmonized imaging molecular integration, AI-driven prognostic modeling, novel PET tracers, and strategies to breach or transiently open the blood–brain barrier to enhance drug delivery. Convergence of these domains may convert diagnostic precision into improved patient outcomes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Medical Imaging in Brain Tumor: Charting the Future)
21 pages, 4360 KB  
Article
Research on the CSODC Strategy Based on Impedance Model Prediction and SSO Stability Assessment of DFIGs
by Xiao Wang, Yina Ren, Linlin Wu, Xiaoyang Deng, Xu Zhang and Qun Wang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(20), 11218; https://doi.org/10.3390/app152011218 - 20 Oct 2025
Viewed by 222
Abstract
As wind power penetration continues to increase, the sub-synchronous control interaction (SSCI) problem caused by the interaction between doubly fed induction generators (DFIGs) and series-compensated transmission lines has become increasingly prominent, posing a serious threat to power system stability. To address this problem, [...] Read more.
As wind power penetration continues to increase, the sub-synchronous control interaction (SSCI) problem caused by the interaction between doubly fed induction generators (DFIGs) and series-compensated transmission lines has become increasingly prominent, posing a serious threat to power system stability. To address this problem, this research proposes a centralized sub-synchronous oscillation damping controller (CSODC) for wind farms. First, a DFIG impedance model was constructed based on multi-operating-point impedance scanning and a Taylor series expansion, achieving impedance prediction with an error of less than 2% under various power conditions. Subsequently, a CSODC comprising a sub-synchronous damping calculator (SSDC) and a power electronic converter is designed. By optimizing feedback signals, phase shift angles, gain parameters, and filter parameters, dynamic adjustment of controllable impedance in the sub-synchronous frequency band is achieved. Frequency-domain impedance analysis demonstrates that the CSODC significantly enhances the system’s equivalent resistance, reversing it from negative to positive at the resonance frequency point. Time-domain simulations validated the CSODC’s effectiveness in scenarios involving series capacitor switching and wind speed disturbances, demonstrating rapid sub-synchronous current decay. The results confirm that the proposed strategy effectively suppresses sub-synchronous oscillations across multiple scenarios, offering an economical and efficient solution to stability challenges in high-penetration renewable energy grids. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Electrical, Electronics and Communications Engineering)
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11 pages, 12359 KB  
Article
Forked-Crossing Metasurface for Multi-Band Polarization Conversion with Distinct Bandwidths
by Pengpeng Zhang, Yifei Zhang, Ziang Li and Rui Yang
Micromachines 2025, 16(10), 1100; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16101100 - 28 Sep 2025
Viewed by 369
Abstract
This study presents a reflective and highly efficient multi-band metasurface polarization converter based on a forked-crossing patch array. Both simulation and experimental results reveal that such a metasurface achieves polarization conversion ratio (PCR) exceeding 90% over five frequency bands of 4.71–5.44 GHz, 7.26–9.55 [...] Read more.
This study presents a reflective and highly efficient multi-band metasurface polarization converter based on a forked-crossing patch array. Both simulation and experimental results reveal that such a metasurface achieves polarization conversion ratio (PCR) exceeding 90% over five frequency bands of 4.71–5.44 GHz, 7.26–9.55 GHz, 11.62–12.6 GHz, 13.33–13.46 GHz, and 15.61–15.62 GHz with high conversion efficiency realized at five distinct resonances. The quality-factor (Q-factor) analysis of each band reveals a hybrid behavior. More specifically, the first and second bands exhibit relatively low Q factors of approximately 6.95 and 3.67, indicating wideband polarization conversion capability. The third band has a moderate Q factor of 12.35, while the fourth and fifth bands show high-Q resonances with Q factors of 103.04 and 1561.5, respectively, indicating sharp and selective frequency responses. This combination of wideband and high-Q narrowband responses makes the proposed design especially suitable for complex electromagnetic scenarios, such as multifunctional radar, communication, and sensing systems, where both broad frequency coverage and precise spectral control are simultaneously required. Full article
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26 pages, 4627 KB  
Article
A Low-Voltage Back-to-Back Converter Interface for Prosumers in a Multifrequency Power Transfer Environment
by Zaid Ali, Hamed Athari and David Raisz
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8340; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158340 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 614
Abstract
The research demonstrates, through simulation and laboratory validation, the development of a low-voltage DC-link (LVDC) back-to-back converter system that enables multi-frequency power transfer. The system operates in two distinct modes, which include a three-phase grid-connected converter transferring fundamental and 5th and 7th harmonic [...] Read more.
The research demonstrates, through simulation and laboratory validation, the development of a low-voltage DC-link (LVDC) back-to-back converter system that enables multi-frequency power transfer. The system operates in two distinct modes, which include a three-phase grid-connected converter transferring fundamental and 5th and 7th harmonic power to a three-phase residential inverter supplying a clean 50 Hz load and another mode that uses a DC–DC buck–boost converter to integrate a battery storage unit for single-phase load supply. The system allows independent control of each harmonic component and maintains a clean sinusoidal voltage at the load side through DC-link isolation. The LVDC link functions as a frequency-selective barrier to suppress non-standard harmonic signals on the load side, effectively isolating the multi-frequency power grid from standard-frequency household loads. The proposed solution fills the gap between the multi-frequency power systems and the single-frequency loads because it allows the transfer of total multi-frequency grid power to the traditional household loads with pure fundamental frequency. Experimental results and simulation outcomes demonstrate that the system achieves high efficiency, robust harmonic isolation, and dynamic adaptability when load conditions change. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Power Electronics: Control and Applications)
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16 pages, 8598 KB  
Article
Tunable Multi-Functional Metamaterial Based on Photosensitive Silicon for Unidirectional Reflectionlessness, Polarization Conversion, and Asymmetric Transmission
by Xue Ren, Yiwen Zhang, Yingqiao Zhang and Xingri Jin
Materials 2025, 18(11), 2614; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18112614 - 3 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 569
Abstract
We propose a tunable multi-functional metamaterial composed of two pairs of gold corner resonators interconnected with photosensitive silicon, operating in the terahertz range. This design achieves dual-band unidirectional reflectionlessness, polarization conversion, and asymmetric transmission for linearly polarized waves, regardless of whether the photosensitive [...] Read more.
We propose a tunable multi-functional metamaterial composed of two pairs of gold corner resonators interconnected with photosensitive silicon, operating in the terahertz range. This design achieves dual-band unidirectional reflectionlessness, polarization conversion, and asymmetric transmission for linearly polarized waves, regardless of whether the photosensitive silicon is in the insulating or conductivity state. When the photosensitive silicon transitions from the insulating state to the conductivity state, its conductivity increases significantly, resulting in a frequency shift phenomenon in the functional peak frequencies. Numerical simulations demonstrate the structure’s robust performance in dual-band unidirectional reflectionlessness and its significant asymmetric transmission, with minimal sensitivity to variations in the incident angle and photosensitive silicon sheet length. By integrating multiple functionalities and enabling frequency tunability through the control of photosensitive silicon conductivity, this design offers a reconfigurable solution for THz applications, such as switches, polarization converters, and modulators. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Optical and Photonic Materials)
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22 pages, 21215 KB  
Article
High-Performance Two-Stage DC/DC Converter Based on LADRC-PI Hybrid Control for PEM Electrolyzer Hydrogen Production
by Qingshuai Yu, Zhenao Sun, Yetong Han, Tuanlong Zhang, Rongxing Zhang and Muhua Lin
Micromachines 2025, 16(6), 665; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16060665 - 31 May 2025
Viewed by 1038
Abstract
While DC/DC converters for water electrolysis systems have been widely investigated, they inherently face a critical compromise between wide voltage regulation capabilities and dynamic response characteristics. This study is based on a two-stage hybrid topology (TSIB-TPLLC) that synergistically combines a two-phase interleaved buck [...] Read more.
While DC/DC converters for water electrolysis systems have been widely investigated, they inherently face a critical compromise between wide voltage regulation capabilities and dynamic response characteristics. This study is based on a two-stage hybrid topology (TSIB-TPLLC) that synergistically combines a two-phase interleaved buck converter with a three-phase LLC resonant converter to resolve this challenge. The first-stage interleaved buck converter enables wide-range voltage regulation while reducing input current ripple and minimizing intermediate bus capacitance through phase-interleaved operation. The subsequent three-phase LLC stage operates at a fixed resonant frequency, achieving inherent output current ripple suppression through multi-phase cancellation while maintaining high conversion efficiency. A dual-loop control architecture incorporating linear active disturbance rejection control (LADRC) with PI compensation is developed to improve transient response compared to conventional PI-based methods. Finally, a 1.2 kW experimental prototype with an input voltage of 250 V and an output voltage of 24 V demonstrates the converter’s operational feasibility and enhanced steady-state/transient performance, confirming its suitability for hydrogen production applications. Full article
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33 pages, 10838 KB  
Article
A Novel Control Method for Current Waveform Reshaping and Transient Stability Enhancement of Grid-Forming Converters Considering Non-Ideal Grid Conditions
by Tengkai Yu, Jifeng Liang, Shiyang Rong, Zhipeng Shu, Cunyue Pan and Yingyu Liang
Energies 2025, 18(11), 2834; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18112834 - 29 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 554
Abstract
The proliferation of next-generation renewable energy systems has driven widespread adoption of electronic devices and nonlinear loads, causing grid distortion that degrades waveform quality in grid-forming (GFM) converters. Additionally, unbalanced grid faults exacerbate overcurrent risks and transient stability challenges when employing conventional virtual [...] Read more.
The proliferation of next-generation renewable energy systems has driven widespread adoption of electronic devices and nonlinear loads, causing grid distortion that degrades waveform quality in grid-forming (GFM) converters. Additionally, unbalanced grid faults exacerbate overcurrent risks and transient stability challenges when employing conventional virtual impedance strategies. While existing studies have separately examined these challenges, few have comprehensively addressed non-ideal grid conditions. To bridge this gap, a novel control strategy is proposed that reshapes the output current waveforms and enhances transient stability in GFM converters under such conditions. First, a sliding mode controller with an improved composite reaching law to achieve rapid reference tracking while eliminating chattering is designed. Second, a multi-quasi-resonance controller incorporating phase compensation is introduced to suppress harmonic distortion in the converter output current. Third, an individual-phase fuzzy adaptive virtual impedance strategy dynamically reshapes the current amplitude during unbalanced faults and improves the system’s transient stability. Validated through PSCAD/EMTDC simulations and hardware-in-the-loop experiments, the proposed strategy demonstrates superior transient stability and fault ride-through capability compared to state-of-the-art methods, ensuring reliable GFM converter operation under severe harmonic and unbalanced grid conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Technology for Analysis and Control of Power Quality)
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14 pages, 5121 KB  
Article
A Single-Phase AC-AC Power Electronic Transformer Without Bulky Energy Storage Elements
by Hui Wang, Shuyang Xie and Liang Yuan
Energies 2025, 18(7), 1769; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18071769 - 1 Apr 2025
Viewed by 623
Abstract
Compared with the line-frequency transformer (LFT), the emerging power electronic transformers (PETs) have gained wide concerns due to the significant merits of higher power density, higher reliability, more flexibility, and multiple functions. However, the need for bulky energy storage elements, multi-stage power conversion [...] Read more.
Compared with the line-frequency transformer (LFT), the emerging power electronic transformers (PETs) have gained wide concerns due to the significant merits of higher power density, higher reliability, more flexibility, and multiple functions. However, the need for bulky energy storage elements, multi-stage power conversion and reduced conversion efficiency, and the intrinsic twice-frequency pulsating power issue are the main disadvantages of the conventional single-phase PETs. To overcome the above shortcomings of conventional single-phase PETs, this paper develops a matrix-type single-phase AC-AC PET without bulky energy storage elements. The proposed PET consists of a line-frequency commutated rectifier, a half-bridge LLC resonant converter with a fixed switching frequency, a boost converter, and a line-frequency commutated inverter. The LLC operates efficiently with unity voltage gain and acts as a high-frequency isolated DC transformer (DCX). The boost converter provides AC output voltage regulation function and the line-frequency commutated inverter unfolds the output voltage of the boost converter to generate the sinusoidal AC output voltage. As a result, high power density, reduced power conversion stages, direct AC-AC power conversion without twice-frequency pulsating power, high conversion efficiency, and high reliability are achieved. The experimental results on a 1kW PET prototype show that sinusoidal input current and output voltage, ZVS of the LLC stage, and output voltage regulation capability are realized. The experimental results verify the correctness and feasibility of the presented methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section F3: Power Electronics)
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17 pages, 6778 KB  
Article
A New Two-Stage Multiple-Parallel-Channel LED Driver Using a CLL-C Resonant Converter and Time Division Control Technique
by Duc Hung Tran, Zeeshan Waheed and Woojin Choi
Energies 2025, 18(5), 1215; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18051215 - 2 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1154
Abstract
This paper introduces a new two-stage multi-parallel-channel LED driver using a CLL-C resonant converter as the first stage and a Time Division Multiple Control circuit as the second stage. The first stage of the proposed converter topology has been developed from CLL-C topology [...] Read more.
This paper introduces a new two-stage multi-parallel-channel LED driver using a CLL-C resonant converter as the first stage and a Time Division Multiple Control circuit as the second stage. The first stage of the proposed converter topology has been developed from CLL-C topology with an additional inductor in the primary side and a capacitor in the secondary side. The converter provides a constant current at a resonant frequency with a Zero Phase Angle (ZPA), thus achieving Zero Voltage Switching (ZVS) turn-on, nearly Zero Current Switching (ZCS) turn-off for the switches, and ZCS for the diodes. The Time Division Multiple Control (TDMC) circuit was applied in the second stage to share the balanced current to each LED string. A 200 W prototype with five output channels was implemented to verify the superior advantages of the proposed topology with a maximum efficiency of 95.05%. Full article
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21 pages, 6372 KB  
Article
A New Transformation Method of the T2 Spectrum Based on Ordered Clustering—A Case Study on the Pore-Throat Utilization Rule of Supercritical CO2 Flooding in Low Permeability Cores
by Yanchun Su, Chunhua Zhao, Xianjie Li, Xiujun Wang, Jian Zhang, Bo Huang, Xiaofeng Tian, Mingxi Liu and Kaoping Song
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(2), 730; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15020730 - 13 Jan 2025
Viewed by 886
Abstract
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and high-pressure mercury injection (HPMI) have been widely used as common characterization methods of pore-throat. It is generally believed that there is a power function relationship between transverse relaxation time (T2) and pore-throat radius (r), but the [...] Read more.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and high-pressure mercury injection (HPMI) have been widely used as common characterization methods of pore-throat. It is generally believed that there is a power function relationship between transverse relaxation time (T2) and pore-throat radius (r), but the segmentation process of the pore-throat interval is subjective, which affects the conversion accuracy. In this paper, ordered clustering is used to improve the existing segmentation method of the pore-throat interval, eliminate the subjectivity in the segmentation process, and obtain a more accurate distribution curve of the pore-throat. For the three kinds of cores with ordinary-low permeability (K > 1 mD), ultra-low permeability (0.1 mD < K < 1 mD), and super-low permeability (K < 0.1 mD), the pore-throat distribution curves of the cores were obtained by using the improved T2 conversion method. Then, the oil and gas two-phase displacement experiment was carried out to investigate the degree of recovery and cumulative gas–oil ratio changes during the displacement process. Finally, the converted T2 spectrum was used to quantify the utilization of different pore sizes. The improved T2 conversion method not only has better accuracy but also is not limited by the pore-throat distribution types (such as unimodal, bimodal, and multi-modal, etc.) and is suitable for any core with measured HPMI pore-throat distribution and an NMR T2 spectrum. Combined with the results of core displacement and the degree of pore-throat utilization, it is found that the potential of miscible flooding to improve the recovery degree is in the order of ordinary-low permeability core (18–22%), ultra-low permeability core (25–29%), and super-low permeability core (8–12%). The utilization degree of immiscible flooding to the <10 nm pore-throat is low (up to 35%), while miscible flooding can effectively use the <3.7 nm pore-throat (up to 73%). The development effect of supercritical CO2 flooding on K < 0.1 mD reservoirs is not good, the seepage resistance of CO2 is large, the miscible flooding makes it difficult to improve the recovery degree, and the utilization effect of pore-throat is poor. Full article
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21 pages, 5144 KB  
Article
Damping of Flying Capacitor Dynamics in Multi-Level Boost DC-DC Converters
by Simone Buso and Leopoldo Rossetto
Electronics 2024, 13(24), 4883; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13244883 - 11 Dec 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1535
Abstract
This paper presents a novel modeling approach for flying capacitor dynamics in boost-type multi-level converters (FCML-boosts) controlled by Phase Shift Pulse Width Modulation (PSPWM). By explicitly taking into account the interaction between the inductor current and the flying capacitor voltage, the model is [...] Read more.
This paper presents a novel modeling approach for flying capacitor dynamics in boost-type multi-level converters (FCML-boosts) controlled by Phase Shift Pulse Width Modulation (PSPWM). By explicitly taking into account the interaction between the inductor current and the flying capacitor voltage, the model is able to reveal an underlying resonance phenomenon and to predict its frequency at each operating point. Based on such a model, whose derivation is explained in detail, both passive and active damping solutions are proposed, designed, and experimentally verified that significantly reduce the undesirable oscillations. The analytical results and the devised control solutions are tested on a 1kW, four-level, boost DC-DC converter prototype employing 200V, 48A rated EPC2034C GaN devices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovative Technologies in Power Converters, 2nd Edition)
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17 pages, 7417 KB  
Article
An Optimized Multi-Level Control Method for Wireless Power Transfer System Using the Particle Swarm Optimization Algorithm
by Jianwei Zhao, Lin Li, Huan Wu, Bo Luo, Huayi Li, Yucai Zhang, Shanzong Liu and Lei Zhao
Electronics 2024, 13(22), 4341; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13224341 - 5 Nov 2024
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 1850
Abstract
A Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) system, known for its contactless power delivery, is extensively used for power supply in spacecraft applications. Achieving efficient and stable power transfer necessitates the integration of DC/DC converters on both the primary and secondary sides of WPT systems [...] Read more.
A Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) system, known for its contactless power delivery, is extensively used for power supply in spacecraft applications. Achieving efficient and stable power transfer necessitates the integration of DC/DC converters on both the primary and secondary sides of WPT systems for power conversion and control. Traditional efficiency optimization methods primarily focus on impedance matching within the wireless power resonance network, often neglecting the overall efficiency optimization of multi-stage DC-DC and WPT systems. This oversight results in suboptimal overall system efficiency despite optimal efficiency in the wireless transmission segment. Additionally, the time-varying nature of mutual inductance and load parameters during power transmission in WPT systems presents challenges for maximum efficiency tracking and power control. This paper introduces a multi-level coordinated control efficiency optimization method for WPT systems utilizing the particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm. This method takes into account the transmission losses across all power conversion units within the WPT system, establishing a mathematical model for the joint optimization of overall system transmission efficiency and power. The PSO algorithm is then employed to solve this optimization model using estimated mutual inductance and load values. By adjusting the DC/DC converters on both sides, the method ensures optimal overall system efficiency and consistent power transmission. Experimental results indicate that under varying load and mutual inductance conditions, a Series–Series (SS) compensated WPT system using this method achieves a 200 W power output with maximum efficiency tracking, a power output error of 0.63%, and an average transmission efficiency of 86.2%. This demonstrates superior power transmission stability and higher efficiency compared to traditional impedance matching methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Wireless Charging Technology)
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20 pages, 6532 KB  
Article
Resonance Suppression Method Based on Hybrid Damping Linear Active Disturbance Rejection Control for Multi-Parallel Converters
by Minhui Qian, Baifu Zhang, Jiansheng Zhang, Wenping Qin, Ning Chen and Yanzhang Liu
Processes 2024, 12(10), 2152; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12102152 - 2 Oct 2024
Viewed by 1296
Abstract
The parallel operation of multiple LCL-type converters will result in a deviation of the resonant frequency and resonance phenomena. The occurrence of harmonic resonance can cause problems such as an increase in harmonic voltage and current. This can lead to the malfunction of [...] Read more.
The parallel operation of multiple LCL-type converters will result in a deviation of the resonant frequency and resonance phenomena. The occurrence of harmonic resonance can cause problems such as an increase in harmonic voltage and current. This can lead to the malfunction of relay protection and automatic devices, causing damage to system equipment. In severe cases, it can cause accidents and threaten the safe operation of the power system. A hybrid damping active disturbance rejection control (HD-ADRC) method is proposed in this paper to suppress the harmonic resonance of parallel LCL-type converters. First, a third-order linear disturbance rejection controller (LADRC) including the linear extended-state observer and the error-feedback control rate is designed based on LCL-type converter model analysis. The proposed method considers the resonance couplings caused by both internal and external disturbances as the total disturbance, thus improving the anti-disturbance capabilities as well as the operational stability of converters in parallel. Then, a hybrid damping control is proposed to reconstruct the damping characteristics of converters to suppress the parallel resonance spike and reduce the resonance frequency offset. And the parameter selection of the control system is optimized through a stability analysis of the tracking performance and anti-disturbance performance of the HD-ADRC controller. Finally, all the theoretical considerations are verified by simulation and experimental results based on the Matlab/Simulink 2018B and dSpace platform. The simulation and experimental results show that the PI controller gives a THD of 5.33%, which is reduced to 4.66% by employing the HD-LADRC, indicating an improved decoupling between the converters working in parallel with the proposed control scheme. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Process Control and Monitoring)
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