Control and Estimation Drives: of Induction Motor
Control and Estimation Drives: of Induction Motor
Control and Estimation Drives: of Induction Motor
subject, and the technology has further advanced in recent years. Induction
motor drives with cage-type machines which have been the workhorses in
industry for variable-speed applications in a wide power range that covers from
and fans, paper and textile mills, subway and locomotive propulsions, electric
and hybrid vehicles, machine tools and robotics, home appliances, heat pumps
and air conditioners, rolling mills, wind generation systems, etc. In addition to
substantially if high performances are demanded. The main reasons for this
presence of harmonics.
industrial drives.
loops added to it. The converter-machine unit is with voltage (V,') and
frequency (w:) as control inputs. The outputs are shown as speed (a,),
developed torque (T,), stator current (I,), and rotor flux (y,). Instead of voltage
control in the inner loop. Besides, there are coupling effects between the input
-
w,
TB
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. 'or
i
Converter- .
'74
-
Controller machine
system Is
w;
t
-P
J
. + Wl
t
Additional feedback
Wr
Signals
Fig. 2.1: General speed control block diagram of induction motor drive
20
For example, both the torque and flux of a machine are functions of
temperature, and skin effect, adding further nonlinearity to the machine model.
sampling effects.
torque control loop, which may be optional. Adding a high-gain inner loop
ability to control the signals within safe limits. Like a DC machine, the flux of
gives fast response and high developed torque per ampere of current. In fact,
the flux under consideration may be stator flux (w,), rotor flux (w,), or air gap
flux (yr, or yp). However, the rotor flux control is considered in the present
case. The inner control loops have faster response (i.e., higher bandwidth) than
complex. Computer simulation study becomes very useful for investigating the
developed. Once the control structure and parameters of the control system are
determined by the simulation study for acceptable performance, a prototype
system can be designed and tested with futher iteration of the controller
parameters.
the control variables only, and disregards the coupling effect in the machine.
For example, the voltage of a machine can be controlled to control the flux, and
frequency or slip can be controlled to control the torque. However, flux and
torque are also functions of frequency and voltage, respectively, Scalar control
sections, where both the magnitude and phase alignment of vector variables are
they are easy to implement. Scalar-controlled drives have been widely used in
The open loop volts/Hz control of an induction motor is by far the most
popular method of speed control because of its simplicity, and these types of
motors are widely used in industry. Traditionally, induction motors have been
used with open loop 60 Hz power supplies for constant speed applications. For
adjustable speed applications, frequency control is natural. However, voltage is
constant neglecting the stator resistance R, drop. Figure 2.2 shows the block
diagram of the volts/Hz speed control method. The power circuit consists of a
voltage-fed inverter.
Ideally, no feedback signals are needed for the control. The fkequency
o,,neglecting the small slip frequency o,,of the machine. The phase voltage
v,' command is directly generated from the frequency command by the gain
factor G, as shown in fig 2.1, so that the flux yr, remains constant. If the stator
resistance and leakage inductance of the machine are neglected, the flux will
also correspond to the air gap flux yr,, or rotor flux yr,. As the frequency
decreases at low speed, the stator resistance tends to absorb the major amount
). AS the frequency is
plane with a fan or pump-type load (TL = K urZ
Now consider the load torque and line voltage variation effects. If the
initial operating point is 3 and the load torque is increased to Tt for the same
frequency command, the speed will drop from @, to o ,'. This droop is small,
23
particularly with a high-etlticiency (i.e., low slip) machine, and is easily
tolerated for a pump or fan-type drive where precision speed control is not
curve.
rectifier
Diode w
Vo Oe
v;
--+
vi = $VS sin 6,
G v;'/u, T)V; lnvedel
v; = Qvs sin (4- 2n -.--+
d 1
Motor
Figure 2.2: Open loop volts/Hz speed control with voltage-fed inverter
If the AC line voltage decreases, the machine terminal voltage also
the figure 2.3 speed dmop correction in an open loop control can be achieved
i-"
V
0)
3
P
- -
w;\ Speed (or)
Wr
Figure 2.3: Torque-speed curves showing eflect offrequency variation, load torque,
increment, the slip will change to change the developed torque (within the safe
limit), but the speed will tend to remain constant because of machine inertia.
command (positive or negative), the drive will easily become unstable. The sat-
in Figure 2.4.
(a) Deceleration
7
I
6
+- Deceleration --&
Acceleration 4
-0-
(b) Time
Figure 2.4: Acceleration/deceleration characteristics with volts/Hz control
torque. The drive now goes through constant acceleration with the ramping of
the frequency command when the speed tracks the frequency within the limit of
slip frequency so that the stability and safe stator current limit are maintained.
steady operating point, which is 4. The machine torque and the speed are
m r = j ( K - T, Id!
where J = Moment of inertia,
With the rated T,, the slope of acceleration 2 as indicated in Figure 2.4
(b), is dictated by parameter J, that is, a higher J will permit slow acceleration,
and vice versa. If it is possible to estimate J on-line for a variable inertia load,
rectifier on the line side, the inverter will need a dynamic brake, as indicated in
point will shift from point 1 to 5, due to a negative developed torque. It will
then decelerate with constant slope given by Equation 2.1 until the steady-state
control by slip regulation as shown in Figure 2.5. Here, the speed loop error
and limiter,
Vd
-,I
I
+
Wr
K1 t-
P-l
" I
Controller
* 1
or
'-(;//O Speed
Encoder
Motor
Figure 2.5: Close loop speed control wilh Valts/Hz control and slip regulation
The dip is added to the feedback speed signal to generate the frequency
~ommandas shown in fig 2.5. The frequency command o,'also generates the
the developed torque at constant flux, the scheme can be considered as an open
loop torque control within a speed control loop. The feedback current signal is
not used anywhere in the loop. With a step-up speed command, the machine
accelerates freely with a slip limit that corresponds to line stator current or
torque limit, and then settles down to the slip value at steady state as dictated
by the load torque. If the command speed w: is reduced by a step, the drive
goes into regenerative or dynamic braking mode and decelerates with constant
Fig. 2.6: (a) Efect of h a d Torque Variation(b) Efect of Supply Voltage Variation
The effects of load torque and line voltage variation are explained in
Figure 2.6. If the initial operating point is 1 and the load torque is increased
from TLto TL'.the speed will tend to drop corresponding to point 2. However,
the speed control loop will increase the frequency until the original speed is
restored at point 3. Since there is no close loop flux control, the line voltage
variation will cause some flux drift. Again if the initial point is 1 on curve a of
Figure.2.6 (b), the decrease of line voltage will reduce the flux, tending to shift
the operating point to 2. The resulting speed drop will act on the speed loop and
raise the frequency to restore the original speed at point 1 on curve c. The
As discussed above, the volts/Hz control has the disadvantage that the
flux may drift, and as a result, the torque sensitivity with slip will vary. In
addition, line voltage variation, incorrect volts1Hz ratio, stator drop variation by
line current, and machine parameter variation may cause weaker flux or the
flux may saturate. In Figure 2.5, if the flux becomes weak, the developed
torque will decrease with the slip limit and the machine's acceleration1
A speed control system with closed loop torque and flux control is
A torque loop within the speed loop improves the speed loop's response.
The flux control loop controls the voltage V,* as shown in fig. 2.7. Both the
torque and flux feedback signals can be estimated from the machine terminal
".
in preceding chapters. With constant Y r command, as the speed increases, the
weakening mode, the flux command must be decreased to vary inversely with
the speed signal so that the PWM controller does not saturate. The flux control
loop is usually slower than the torque control loop. The drive can operate in
regenerative (or dynamic) braking mode, but the reversal of speed requires a
sluggish flux control loop. This inherent coupling effect slows down the torque
response.
Besides, the torque and the flux of the machine are directly sensitive to
currents. A voltage-fed inverter drive with outer loop torque and flux control
and hysteresis-band current control in the inner loop is shown in Figure 2.8.
Instead of constant rated flux, the flux can be programmed with torque as