An Automated Average-Value Modeling Methodology for Power Electronic Sources and Loads

Posted by on Oct 8, 2009 in Aircraft, Electronics, Ning Wu, Oleg Wasynczuk | 0 comments

N. Wu, O. Wasynczuk, Purdue University and PC Krause and Associates; Peter T. Lamm, U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory

In this paper, an automated averaging modeling methodology is set forth applicable to power electronic converters of arbitrary complexity. The user-defined inputs consist of a circuit description similar to the SPICE netlist (network graph and branch parameters), whereupon the input/output impedance-versus-frequency characteristics are automatically and rapidly generated. In addition to eliminating the need for the analytical derivation of average-value models, this methodology readily permits the inclusion of secondary effects such as conduction losses, switching losses, and magnetic nonlinearities, to name a few. This methodology has been successfully applied to characterize the impedance of a one-quadrant dc/dc buck converter, a three-phase diode rectifier source with three different modes of operation, and a space-vector-modulated dc/ac inverter.

SAE Transactions Journal of Aerospace, 2007, pp. 846-855 and 2006 SAE Power Systems Conference, November 7–9, 2006, New Orleans, LA. Paper #2006-01-3036