transformer magnetizing current

Status
Not open for further replies.

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
140201-1618 EST

The original post by electrofelon presents an interesting problem. I have not read all the posts. Some are of some value, and others illustrate a total lack of understanding of electrical theory.

...
Been a few days since I read the posts, and I'll not go back and review who said what... but my impression is everyone is discussing this issue from the standpoint the primary being a stiff supply of power with frequency varying from DC to several hertz. As I understand the OP, the main concern is overloading the transformer at DC through all frequencies below rated hertz. The supply is a wind-turbine-driven 3? generator. It is a mechanical to electrical power converter. What is the generator's maximum power output at 0 hertz? 5 hertz? 10 hertz? ... Will the generator ever develop enough power to overload the transformer?
 

winnie

Senior Member
Location
Springfield, MA, USA
Occupation
Electric motor research
Okay, with a self excited generator, the output of the generator will naturally follow a 'constant V/Hz' pattern.

A 12 pole machine means that if you apply 6Hz you would get 1 rotation per second, or 60 RPM. You could say that this means the output is 0.1 Hz per RPM. You have supplied the open circuit voltage of 0.5V/RPM, so that means that the output of the generator will track at 5V/Hz. I presume that this is the line-line voltage measurement.

Because the generator is operating in a roughly constant V/Hz fashion (ignoring voltage _drop_ due to loading), the transformer will not have problems with saturation caused by low frequency. As long as the voltage drops along with the frequency, the peak flux in the transformer core will remain constant.

If you leave the primary of the transformer unchanged, it should continue to function with this generator. If you reconnect the transformer in delta, then I suspect the core will saturate and you will see a bunch of problems. So I don't see you being able to get the voltage that you need by reconnecting the transformer secondary, unless you have a way of adding turns to the secondary.

IMHO the simplest approach is to use a different MPPT designed to operate with the higher voltage produced by your generator. However this might be an expensive or simply not easily available approach.

You asked about using a VFD as some sort of DC-DC converter. While I can imagine ways to 'hack' such a system together, IMHO it would be a bad approach. The power semiconductors of the VFD would be exactly what you would want in order to build a high voltage MPPT, but the control logic would be all wrong. Replacing the control logic would be a nightmare.

Given the hardware that you actually have, the first thing that I would look at is the winding connection in the generator. Perhaps the generator can be re-connected for lower voltage. In this case you might get the voltage low enough to use the MPPT you have, without the transformer.

The next thing that I would look at is the rectifier. If you can bring the neutral from the transformer, you could use a different rectifier arrangement and obtain a lower DC voltage. This might be a low enough voltage to use your existing MPPT, without the transformer.

The next thing that I would consider is using a different sort of rectifier arrangement on the output of your existing transformer. Take a look at 'voltage doubling rectifiers'. Through a relatively simple arrangement of capacitors and additional rectifier diodes, you can get a higher DC voltage than the normal output from a full bridge rectifier. As you describe your system, you simply need a higher output voltage to drive a 24V battery string rather than a 12V battery string. A voltage doubling rectifier might just do the trick.

-Jon
 

gar

Senior Member
Location
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Occupation
EE
140202-1733 EST

electrofelon:

If you have no way to get datasheets on the combination of your turbine and generator, then I like your idea of mounting this on truck or some vehicle and running tests.

I believe your goal is maximum power transfer, or possibly more accurately maximum energy collection over some time period with varying input conditions, but with some statistically known distribution of this energy output of the turbine-generator.

I believe you can treat the combination of turbine and generator as having some equivalent source impedance, but this may not be constant with wind speed. This source impedance would be a combination of generator characteristics and the turbine blade system. I believe the concept that maximum power transfer occurs when the source resistance equals the load resistance and the reactive components cancel (series resonance) applies here where the blade characteristics are included in the source.

So fundamentally you want a dynamically varying impedance matching system between the source and the load, and you want this optimized for the statistics of the energy source (wind). Note that system efficiency at varying operating points needs consideration.

.
 

GoldDigger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
Note that since the available power from a wind turbine increases as the cube of the wind speed, the overall energy generation is most influenced by the high speed end of the distribution curve.

Tapatalk!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top