Content deleted Content added
Removed broken external link. |
Aadirulez8 (talk | contribs) m v2.05 - Fix errors for CW project (Square brackets without correct end - External link with two brackets) |
||
(16 intermediate revisions by 13 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Algorithm on pulse-width modulation}}
{{Modulation techniques}}
'''Space vector modulation''' ('''SVM''') is an algorithm for the control of [[pulse
{{cite book
|author1=M.P. Kazmierkowski |author2=R. Krishnan |author3=F. Blaabjerg |
| publisher = San Diego: Academic Press
| year = 2002
| isbn = 978-0-12-402772-5
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=6_dmMHEyvrkC
}}</ref><ref name=invention>
==Principle==
▲[[File:Three leg inverter.gif|240px|thumb|right|Topology of a basic three phase inverter.]]
A three-phase inverter as shown to the right converts a DC supply, via a series of switches, to three output legs which could be connected to a three-phase motor.
Line 17 ⟶ 18:
The switches must be controlled so that at no time are both switches in the same leg turned on or else the DC supply would be shorted. This requirement may be met by the complementary operation of the switches within a leg. i.e. if A<sup>+</sup> is on then A<sup>−</sup> is off and vice versa. This leads to eight possible switching vectors for the inverter, V<sub>0</sub> through V<sub>7</sub> with six active switching vectors and two zero vectors.
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin: 1em auto;"▼
▲{| class="wikitable" border="1"
|-
! Vector
Line 128:
| zero vector
|}
Note that looking down the columns for the active switching vectors V<sub>1-6</sub>, the output voltages vary as a pulsed sinusoid, with each leg offset by 120 degrees of [[Phasor (electronics)|phase angle]].
To implement space vector modulation, a reference signal V<sub>ref</sub> is sampled with a frequency f<sub>s</sub> (T<sub>s</sub> = 1/f<sub>s</sub>). The reference signal may be generated from three separate phase references using the [[Alpha beta gamma transform|
[[File:Space Vector Modulation.gif|center|thumb|400px|All eight possible switching vectors for a three-leg inverter using space vector modulation. An example V<sub>ref</sub> is shown in the first sector. V<sub>ref_MAX</sub> is the maximum amplitude of V<sub>ref</sub> before non-linear overmodulation is reached.]]
More complicated SVM strategies for the unbalanced operation of four-leg three-phase inverters do exist. In these strategies the switching vectors define a 3D shape (a hexagonal [[Prism (geometry)|prism]] in <math>\alpha\beta\gamma</math> coordinates<ref>R. Zhang, V. Himamshu Prasad, D. Boroyevich and F.C. Lee, "Three-Dimensional Space Vector Modulation for Four-Leg Voltage-Source Converters," IEEE Power Electronics Letters, vol. 17, no. 3, May 2002</ref> or a [[dodecahedron]] in abc coordinates<ref>M.A. Perales, M.M. Prats, R.Portillo, J.L. Mora, J.I. León, and L.G. Franquelo, "Three-Dimensional Space Vector Modulation in abc Coordinates for Four-Leg Voltage Source Converters," IEEE Power Electronics Letters, vol. 1, no. 4, December 2003</ref>) rather than a 2D [[hexagon]]. General SVM techniques are also available for converters with any number of legs and levels.<ref>Ó. Lopez, J. Alvarez, J. Doval-Gandoy and F. D. Freijedo, "Multilevel Multiphase Space Vector PWM Algorithm," in IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics, vol. 55, no. 5, pp. 1933-1942, May 2008.</ref>
==See also==
* [https://www.switchcraft.org/learning/2017/3/15/space-vector-pwm-intro Space Vector PWM Intro] (includes animations depicting changing relationships between phases and switch states)
* [[
* [[Inverter (electrical)]]
* [[pulse
==References==
{{reflist}}
|