Research on Control of Improved Dual-Buck Energy Storage Inverter

1. Introduction

Energy storage systems play a pivotal role in balancing power fluctuations and enhancing the stability of distributed renewable energy grids. As a critical interface between energy storage units and the grid, bidirectional inverters require improvements in efficiency, power density, and reliability. This paper proposes an improved two-stage Dual-Buck energy storage inverter topology, addressing challenges such as bridge-arm shoot-through, switching losses, leakage current suppression, and seamless grid-tie transitions.


2. Improved Two-Stage Dual-Buck Topology

2.1 Topology Design

The proposed topology integrates a front-end DC/DC converter with a three-phase Dual-Buck full-bridge inverter (Fig. 1). The DC/DC stage enhances voltage utilization and extends switch lifespan through dual-mode operation, while the Dual-Buck inverter eliminates shoot-through risks and dead-time requirements.

2.2 Operating Modes

The Dual-Buck inverter operates in two modes:

  • Full-Bridge Mode: Traditional complementary switching with parallel inductor currents.
  • Half-Cycle Mode: Single-inductor conduction per half-cycle, reducing switching losses by 68.3% and conduction losses by 60.8%.

Switching losses for IGBTs are calculated as: [ P{son} = \frac{1}{2\pi} \int{-\pi}^{\pi} f_s U{CC} i_C t_r d\theta = \frac{U{dc} I_m f_s t_r}{4} ] [ P{soff} = \frac{U{dc} I_m f_s t_f}{4} ] where (U_{dc}) = 750 V, (I_m) = 37.21 A, (t_r) = 1 μs, and (t_f) = 1 μs.

2.3 Rectification Mode Analysis

In rectification, the topology employs high-frequency switching to regulate DC bus voltage. The state-space model for the DC/DC converter is: [ \begin{cases} L_1 \frac{di{L1}}{dt} = D(t)U{dc} – u{in} \ C_2 \frac{du{in}}{dt} = i{L1} – \frac{u{in}}{R_L} \end{cases} ]


3. Leakage Current Suppression Strategies

3.1 Common-Mode Voltage Analysis

Non-isolated energy storage inverter generate leakage currents due to parasitic capacitance ((C{pv}) = 3.3 nF). The common-mode voltage ((U{cm})) is expressed as: [ U{cm} = \frac{U{AO} + U{BO} + U{CO}}{3} ]

3.2 Modulation Strategies

Three modulation techniques are compared:

Modulation(U_{cm}) FluctuationLeakage CurrentDC Utilization
SVPWM(0 \leftrightarrow U_{dc})7 A (peak)100%
AZSPWM2(U{dc}/3 \leftrightarrow 2U{dc}/3)2.3 A (peak)100%
RSPWMConstant (U_{dc}/3)<1 A (peak)66.7%

AZSPWM2 balances leakage suppression (67% reduction vs. SVPWM) and voltage utilization.

3.3 Simulation Verification

MATLAB/Simulink results validate leakage current reduction (Fig. 2):

  • SVPWM: (I_{leak}) = 7 A, THD = 4.2%.
  • AZSPWM2: (I_{leak}) = 2.3 A, THD = 3.8%.
  • RSPWM: (I_{leak}) = 0.9 A, THD = 5.1%.

4. Control Strategy Design

4.1 Three-Loop Control Architecture

The system employs voltage-current-power cascaded control:

  1. Inner Current Loop: Bandwidth = 1 kHz, PI parameters: (k{ip}) = 18, (k{ii}) = 1200.
  2. Voltage Loop: Bandwidth = 200 Hz, PI parameters: (k{vp}) = 20, (k{vi}) = 0.06.
  3. Power Loop: Droop control for grid synchronization: [ \Delta f = -k_p \Delta P, \quad \Delta V = -k_q \Delta Q ]

4.2 Seamless Mode Transition

  • Island-to-Grid: Pre-synchronization aligns voltage magnitude, frequency, and phase. Phase-locked loop (PLL) dynamics: [ G_{PLL}(s) = \frac{k_p s + k_i}{s^2 + k_p s + k_i} ]
  • Grid-to-Island: Transition within 20 ms using V/f control.

5. Experimental Validation

5.1 RT-LAB Hardware-in-Loop Platform

The setup includes:

  • OP4510 real-time simulator.
  • DC bus: 100 V → 750 V (Boost ratio = 7.5).
  • Grid parameters: 311 V (peak), 50 Hz.

5.2 Key Results

  • Inverter Mode: Output THD = 2.8%, efficiency = 97.2%.
  • Rectifier Mode: DC voltage ripple <1.5%, current ripple <10%.
  • Transition: <0.5% voltage dip during island-to-grid switching.

6. Conclusion

The improved Dual-Buck energy storage inverter demonstrates superior performance:

  • 68.3% lower switching losses in half-cycle mode.
  • 67% leakage current reduction via AZSPWM2.
  • Seamless mode transitions with <20 ms latency. This topology offers a viable solution for high-efficiency, high-reliability renewable energy integration.

Tables Table 1. Switching Loss Comparison (Full-Bridge vs. Half-Cycle)

ParameterFull-BridgeHalf-CycleReduction
Switching Loss (W)139.5444.4068.3%
Conduction Loss (W)60.7137.7560.8%

Table 2. Control Loop Parameters

LoopBandwidth(k_p)(k_i)
Current1 kHz181200
Voltage200 Hz200.06
Droop5 Hz0.000040.0011

Equations Boost Converter Transfer Function: [ G{ud}(s) = \frac{U{dc}(s)}{d(s)} = \frac{U_{dc}}{L_1 C_2 s^2 + \frac{L_1}{R_H} s + D^2} ]

Dual-Buck Inverter Model in dq-frame: [ \begin{cases} L \frac{di_d}{dt} = u_d – R i_d + \omega L i_q \ L \frac{di_q}{dt} = u_q – R i_q – \omega L i_d \end{cases} ]

This work advances the design of energy storage inverter, providing a robust framework for future smart grid applications.

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