Abstract—Various
applications, like in underground mines and oil and gas industries, require
remote operation of vectorcontrolled medium-voltage variable speed drives via a
long motor feeder. The use of voltage source inverters in such cases leads to
motor overvoltage and harmonic quality problems. The current source inverter
(CSI) is ideally matched to these applications because of its motor-friendly
voltage output. Speed sensorless operation is mandatory due to the longmotor
feeder. Although the model reference adaptive system (MRAS) is a powerful and
proven speed estimation tool, its implementation in long motor feeder drives
faces many challenges. Among them, and addressed in this paper, are inherent dc
offset in its stator model, the need for actual motor voltage and current
values, and oscillations in the estimated speed due to errors in the motor
current measurement signals. In this paper, a sensorless CSI vector-controlled
drive, suitable for long motor feeder applications, is studied. Improved speed
estimation is achieved by proposing 1) a modified dc-offset eliminator for an
MRAS speed estimation and 2) a compensation technique for motor current’s
measurement errors. Intensive experimental results, for a low-voltage scaled
model, along with simulations validate the effectiveness of the proposed
technique.
(Index Terms—Current source inverter, long feeder,
medium voltage drives, speed sensor-less.)
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