2021
DOI: 10.1002/cta.3043
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Analysis, control, and modeling of the three‐port converter without port voltage constraint for photovoltaic/battery system application

Abstract: For a photovoltaic (PV)/battery power system consisting of PV module, energy storage system, and local load, using a three‐port converter (TPC) instead of several single‐input converters is more desirable, such as simpler circuit, higher efficiency, lower cost, and centralized control without communication circuit. In this paper, a TPC is proposed and analyzed, which includes operating modes, steady‐state performance, and parameter design. Compared with other converters, the proposed TPC has a low cost, compac… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The converter can be modeled either by well-known analytical techniques, such as steady-state averaging method 49,50 or by numerical methods. 51 A PID controller (type III compensator), see Figure 14A, is designed for the proposed converter based on its transfer function that is shown in Figure 14B.…”
Section: Simulation Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The converter can be modeled either by well-known analytical techniques, such as steady-state averaging method 49,50 or by numerical methods. 51 A PID controller (type III compensator), see Figure 14A, is designed for the proposed converter based on its transfer function that is shown in Figure 14B.…”
Section: Simulation Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Various three‐port converters are also compared with the proposed MIPBS; generally, they uses a whole PV array as an input; however, in MIPBS, each PV module operates independently. The converter toplogy presented in Tian et al 39 is three‐port converter used for the PV and battery integration; this converter requires the single inductor for the operation; however, the use of five switches and five diodes per PV module makes it expensive as compared with the proposed MIPBS.…”
Section: Comparative Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the DC bus supports several levels of voltage, demands and resources can be linked to either the greater or lesser dc voltage level, which is an effective solution in many situations. For example, voltage boosting is required to link photovoltaic (PV) 9,10 resources to the dc bus; but, whenever a minimum dc-link is available, linking PV to this reduced voltage eliminates the need for further boosting in voltage, costs of the converter, and volume. [11][12][13] Multilevel converters (MLC), such as ILC, provide several dc voltages levels dependent on its construction, making voltage balancing more difficult.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%