OLIVEIRA, M. A. P.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3919623226705698; OLIVEIRA, Marcus André Pereira.
Resumo:
This work presents a theoretical and experimental study about Cascaded Cell Multilevel
Inverter (CCMLI) as the power interface between a set of photovoltaic (PV) panels and
the commercial grid. The choice for this topology results from the higher voltage quality
synthesized by the multilevel system, combined with the superior control modularity obtained
by the proposed data processing methodology. Although this kind of converter can be
applied at any power level and phase number, the analysis inside this thesis is restricted to
single-phase small power systems, as typically found in residences or in other distributed microgeneration
environments. In these places, usually located in urban areas, the set of panels
can be exposed to partial shading with short or long duration, differences in sunlight relative
angle orientation or differences between panel’s characteristics (panels mismatches), causing
asymmetric power distribution between system elements. In this text, such asymmetry
is compensated on power switches command structure, by acting on modulation controller
of each converter cell. The average reference voltage at each DC link is calculated by a
MPPT algorithm which seeks the highest value of average power provided by the PV source.
Obtaining the maximized power in each cell carries the entire system to operate on global
maximum power point. An approach to dynamic operation of grid connected converter is
also presented, using simulation environments and experimental results from a 9 levels prototype,
developed according to the suggested control methodology. These results confirms
the expected voltage quality at inverter output, as well his capability to adapt readily to
irradiation level changes over the panels.