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Dive into the research topics where Rijil Ramchand is active.

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Featured researches published by Rijil Ramchand.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2009

A Dual Seven-Level Inverter Supply for an Open-End Winding Induction Motor Drive

Gopal Mondal; K. Sivakumar; Rijil Ramchand; K. Gopakumar; Emil Levi

This paper develops a seven-level inverter structure for open-end winding induction motor drives. The inverter supply is realized by cascading four two-level and two three-level neutral-point-clamped inverters. The inverter control is designed in such a way that the common-mode voltage (CMV) is eliminated. DC-link capacitor voltage balancing is also achieved by using only the switching-state redundancies. The proposed power circuit structure is modular and therefore suitable for fault-tolerant applications. By appropriately isolating some of the inverters, the drive can be operated during fault conditions in a five-level or a three-level inverter mode, with preserved CMV elimination and DC-link capacitor voltage balancing, within a reduced modulation range.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2010

A Hybrid Multilevel Inverter Topology for an Open-End Winding Induction-Motor Drive Using Two-Level Inverters in Series With a Capacitor-Fed H-Bridge Cell

K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

In this paper, a new five-level inverter topology for open-end winding induction-motor (IM) drive is proposed. The open-end winding IM is fed from one end with a two-level inverter in series with a capacitor-fed H-bridge cell, while the other end is connected to a conventional two-level inverter. The combined inverter system produces voltage space-vector locations identical to that of a conventional five-level inverter. A total of 2744 space-vector combinations are distributed over 61 space-vector locations in the proposed scheme. With such a high number of switching state redundancies, it is possible to balance the H-bridge capacitor voltages under all operating conditions including overmodulation region. In addition to that, the proposed topology eliminates 18 clamping diodes having different voltage ratings compared with the neutral point clamped inverter. On the other hand, it requires only one capacitor bank per phase, whereas the flying-capacitor scheme for a five-level topology requires more than one capacitor bank per phase. The proposed inverter topology can be operated as a three-level inverter for full modulation range, in case of any switch failure in the capacitor-fed H-bridge cell. This will increase the reliability of the system. The proposed scheme is experimentally verified on a four-pole 5-hp IM drive.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2011

A Rotor Flux Estimation During Zero and Active Vector Periods Using Current Error Space Vector From a Hysteresis Controller for a Sensorless Vector Control of IM Drive

Chintan Patel; Rijil Ramchand; K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; K. Gopakumar

This paper proposes a sensorless vector control scheme for general-purpose induction motor drives using the current error space phasor-based hysteresis controller. In this paper, a new technique for sensorless operation is developed to estimate rotor voltage and hence rotor flux position using the stator current error during zero-voltage space vectors. It gives a comparable performance with the vector control drive using sensors especially at a very low speed of operation (less than 1 Hz). Since no voltage sensing is made, the dead-time effect and loss of accuracy in voltage sensing at low speed are avoided here, with the inherent advantages of the current error space phasor-based hysteresis controller. However, appropriate device on-state drops are compensated to achieve a steady-state operation up to less than 1 Hz. Moreover, using a parabolic boundary for current error, the switching frequency of the inverter can be maintained constant for the entire operating speed range. Simple σLs estimation is proposed, and the parameter sensitivity of the control scheme to changes in stator resistance, Rs is also investigated in this paper. Extensive experimental results are shown at speeds less than 1 Hz to verify the proposed concept. The same control scheme is further extended from less than 1 Hz to rated 50 Hz six-step operation of the inverter. Here, the magnetic saturation is ignored in the control scheme.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2010

A Five-Level Inverter Scheme for a Four-Pole Induction Motor Drive by Feeding the Identical Voltage-Profile Windings From Both Sides

K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

This paper presents a five-level inverter scheme with four two-level inverters for a four-pole induction motor (IM) drive. In a conventional three-phase four-pole IM, there exists two identical voltage-profile winding coil groups per phase around the armature, which are connected in series and spatially apart by two pole pitches. In this paper, these two identical voltage-profile pole-pair winding coils in each phase of the IM are disconnected and fed from four two-level inverters from four sides of the windings with one-fourth dc-link voltage as compared to a conventional five-level neutral-point-clamped inverter. The scheme presented in this paper does not require any special design modification for the induction machine. For this paper, a four-pole IM drive is used, and the scheme can be easily extended to IMs with more than four poles. The proposed scheme is experimentally verified on a four-pole 5-hp IM drive.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2009

A Combination of Hexagonal and 12-Sided Polygonal Voltage Space Vector PWM Control for IM Drives Using Cascaded Two-Level Inverters

Anandarup Das; K. Sivakumar; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

This paper proposes a multilevel inverter configuration which produces a hexagonal voltage space vector structure in the lower modulation region and a 12-sided polygonal space vector structure in the overmodulation region. A conventional multilevel inverter produces 6n plusmn 1 (n = odd) harmonics in the phase voltage during overmodulation and in the extreme square-wave mode of operation. However, this inverter produces a 12-sided polygonal space vector location, leading to the elimination of 6n plusmn 1 (n = odd) harmonics in the overmodulation region extending to a final 12-step mode of operation with a smooth transition. The benefits of this arrangement are lower losses and reduced torque pulsation in an induction motor drive fed from this converter at higher modulation indexes. The inverter is fabricated by using three conventional cascaded two-level inverters with asymmetric dc-bus voltages. A comparative simulation study of the harmonic distortion in the phase voltage and associated losses in conventional multilevel inverters and that of the proposed inverter is presented in this paper. Experimental validation on a prototype shows that the proposed converter is suitable for high-power applications because of low harmonic distortion and low losses.


IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics | 2009

A Pulsewidth Modulated Control of Induction Motor Drive Using Multilevel 12-Sided Polygonal Voltage Space Vectors

Anandarup Das; K. Sivakumar; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

In this paper, a novel 12-sided polygonal space vector structure is proposed for an induction motor drive. The space vector pattern presented in this paper consists of two 12-sided concentric polygons with the outer polygon having a radius double the inner one. As compared to previously reported 12-sided polygonal space vector structures, this paper subdivides the space vector plane into smaller sized triangles. This helps in reducing the switching frequency of the inverters without deteriorating the output voltage quality. It also reduces the device ratings and dv/dt stress on the devices to half. At the same time, other benefits obtained from the existing 12-sided space vector structure, such as increased linear modulation range and complete elimination of 5th and 7th order harmonics in the phase voltage, are also retained in this paper. The space vector structure is realized by feeding an open-end induction motor with two conventional three-level neutral point clamped (NPC) inverters with asymmetric isolated DC link voltage sources. The neutral point voltage fluctuations in the three-level NPC inverters are eliminated by utilizing the switching state multiplicities for a space vector point. The pulsewidth modulation timings are calculated using sampled reference waveform amplitudes and are explained in detail in this paper. Experimental verification on a laboratory prototype shows that this configuration may be considered suitable for high power drives.


conference of the industrial electronics society | 2010

A current error space vector based hysteresis controller with constant switching frequency and simple online boundary computation for VSI fed IM drive

Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; Anandarup Das; K. Sivakumar; K. Gopakumar; L. M. Patnaik

This paper proposes a simple current error space vector based hysteresis controller for two-level inverter fed Induction Motor (IM) drives. This proposed hysteresis controller retains all advantages of conventional current error space vector based hysteresis controllers like fast dynamic response, simple to implement, adjacent voltage vector switching etc. The additional advantage of this proposed hysteresis controller is that it gives a phase voltage frequency spectrum exactly similar to that of a constant switching frequency space vector pulse width modulated (SVPWM) inverter. In this proposed hysteresis controller the boundary is computed online using estimated stator voltages along alpha and beta axes thus completely eliminating look up tables used for obtaining parabolic hysteresis boundary proposed in [19]. The estimation of stator voltage is carried out using current errors along alpha and beta axes and steady state model of induction motor. The proposed scheme is simple and capable of taking inverter upto six step mode operation, if demanded by drive system. The proposed hysteresis controller based inverter fed drive scheme is simulated extensively using SIMULINK toolbox of MATLAB for steady state and transient performance. The experimental verification for steady state performance of the proposed scheme is carried out on a 3.7kW IM.


ieee region 10 conference | 2009

A three level voltage space vector generation for open end winding IM using single voltage source driven dual two-level inverter

K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

In this paper, a new scheme for three-level voltage space vector generation is proposed. In this work, the three-level inverter topology is realized by feeding an open winding induction motor with two two-level inverters, fed from a single dc source having the magnitude half compared to the NPC three-level inverter. Compared to existing three-level inverter topologies for open-end winding induction motor drives, the present work eliminates the requirement of two isolated voltage sources or additional power circuits (like common mode voltage chokes). In a conventional 3-phase four-pole induction motor, there exist two identical winding coil groups per phase around the armature, which are connected in series and spatially apart by two pole pitches. In this work, these two identical voltage profile pole pair winding coils in each phase of the induction motor are disconnected and reconnected in two star connected groups to deny the path for common mode current. They are fed from independently controlled (decoupled control) two two-level inverters from both sides of the motor with the same dc-link voltage with half the magnitude compared to conventional NPC three-level inverter. The scheme presented in this paper, doesnt require any special design modification for the induction machine. For the present study, a four pole IM drive is used, and the scheme can be easily extended to Induction motors with more than four poles. The proposed scheme is experimentally verified on a four pole, 5HP induction motor drive.


conference of the industrial electronics society | 2009

A simple five-level inverter topology for induction motor drive using conventional two-level inverters and flying capacitor technique

K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

This paper proposes a new five-level inverter topology for open-end winding induction motor (IM) drive. The popular existing circuit configurations for five-level inverter include the NPC inverter and flying capacitor topologies. Compared to the NPC inverter, the proposed topology eliminates eighteen clamping diodes having different voltage ratings in the present circuit. Moreover it requires only one capacitor bank per phase, whereas flying capacitor schemes for five level topologies require six capacitor banks per phase. The proposed topology is realized by feeding the phase winding of an open-end induction motor with two-level inverters in series with flying capacitors. The flying capacitor voltages are balanced using the switching state redundancy for full modulation range. The proposed inverter scheme is capable of producing two-level to five-level pulse width modulated voltage across the phase winding depending on the modulation range. Additionally, in case of any switch failure in the flying capacitor connection, the proposed inverter topology can be operated as a three-level inverter for full modulation range. The proposed scheme is experimentally verified on a four pole, 5hp induction motor drive.


Epe Journal | 2010

Two Different Schemes for Three-Level Voltage Space Vector Generation for Induction Motor Drives with Reduced DC-Link Voltage

K. Sivakumar; Anandarup Das; Rijil Ramchand; Chintan Patel; K. Gopakumar

Abstract In this paper, two different schemes for three-level voltage space vector generation for induction motor drives are proposed. In a conventional 3-phase four-pole induction motor, there exist two identical winding coil groups per phase around the stator, which are connected in series and spatially apart by two pole pitches. In this work, these two identical voltage profile pole pair winding coils in each phase of the induction motor are disconnected and reconnected appropriately to achieve a drive scheme with reduced dc-link voltage. Two different schemes are proposed in the present work. In the first scheme the identical pole phase winding groups are connected in two star groups and fed from the independently controlled (decoupled control) two two-level inverters from both sides of the motor with the same dc-link voltage with half the magnitude compared to conventional NPC three-level inverter. The phase windings are connected in two star groups, so there will not be any path for zero sequence currents. Thereby requirement of isolated voltage sources is eliminated compared to the previous open-end winding multilevel inverter schemes. In the second scheme the identical pole phase winding groups are connected in parallel and fed from the two two-level inverters from both sides of the motor with one fourth the dc-link voltage (compared to the conventional NPC three-level inverter) resulting in a three-level voltage space vector across the motor phase windings. The schemes presented in this paper, does not require any special design modification for the induction machine. For the present study, a four pole IM drive is used, and the scheme can be easily extended to induction motors with more than four poles. The proposed scheme is experimentally verified on a four pole, 5HP induction motor drive.

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K. Gopakumar

Indian Institute of Science

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Chintan Patel

Indian Institute of Science

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Anandarup Das

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

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Gopal Mondal

Indian Institute of Science

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K. Siva Kumar

Indian Institute of Science

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L. M. Patnaik

Defence Institute of Advanced Technology

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S. Figarado

Indian Institute of Science

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Emil Levi

Liverpool John Moores University

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