Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid

This report presents an adaptive wireless charging system for electrical vehicles. Three important aspects of the wireless charging system are being considered. Consisting of frequency tuning for maximum power transfer efficiency, impedance matching for maximum output power and single- inductor mult...

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Main Author: Lim, Gerald Lip Giap
Other Authors: So Ping Lam
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/61284
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-612842023-07-07T16:41:26Z Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid Lim, Gerald Lip Giap So Ping Lam School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering DRNTU::Engineering This report presents an adaptive wireless charging system for electrical vehicles. Three important aspects of the wireless charging system are being considered. Consisting of frequency tuning for maximum power transfer efficiency, impedance matching for maximum output power and single- inductor multiple-output (SIMO) DC/DC converter for balance charging. The electromagnetic resonant coupling technology is being used for high power transfer efficiency. By varying air gap between the transmitter coil and the receiver coil, the mutual inductance will be changed. The theoretical analysis shows that varying air gap or/and load impedance results in shifting the optimal operational frequency and the reduction of power transfer efficiency. Model predictive control (MPC) is utilised to obtain optimal operational frequency. More, through varying load leads impedance mismatch, the maximum output power condition becomes invalid. A novel PI impedance matching network is developed to keep maximum output power under a range of load impedance variations. The final stage of the wireless charging system is a DC/DC converter for balance charging. A practical charging method is individual charging based on status of each battery. In order to realise individual battery charging, SIMO DC/DC converter is being used. Smaller size and low cost are the advantages of SIMO DC/DC converter, however it has cross regulation problem. Therefore, a model predictive voltage control method is developed for SIMO DC/DC converter as such the converter will be operating in the continuous conduction mode (CCM) to suppress the cross regulation. MPC strategy has the capability to track the reference voltage automatically, so that it is being used to control the inverter in the execution of the frequency tuning by following the reference frequency. The MPC employed dynamic tracking property which aids SIMO DC/DC converter to reduce the impact of cross regulation. Therefore, the MPC is used in inverter for frequency tuning and the SIMO DC/DC converter for balance charging A simulation model is built using Matlab/Simulink to evaluate the performance of the wireless charging system. The current simulation results show that the maximum wireless power transfer efficiency is 93% with resonant frequency tuning, and the maximum power transferred to the load is stably maintained with a novel PI impedance matching network, and the cross regulation of SIMO DC/DC converter is significantly reduced with MPC control. Bachelor of Engineering 2014-06-09T02:29:17Z 2014-06-09T02:29:17Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/61284 en Nanyang Technological University 64 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Lim, Gerald Lip Giap
Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
description This report presents an adaptive wireless charging system for electrical vehicles. Three important aspects of the wireless charging system are being considered. Consisting of frequency tuning for maximum power transfer efficiency, impedance matching for maximum output power and single- inductor multiple-output (SIMO) DC/DC converter for balance charging. The electromagnetic resonant coupling technology is being used for high power transfer efficiency. By varying air gap between the transmitter coil and the receiver coil, the mutual inductance will be changed. The theoretical analysis shows that varying air gap or/and load impedance results in shifting the optimal operational frequency and the reduction of power transfer efficiency. Model predictive control (MPC) is utilised to obtain optimal operational frequency. More, through varying load leads impedance mismatch, the maximum output power condition becomes invalid. A novel PI impedance matching network is developed to keep maximum output power under a range of load impedance variations. The final stage of the wireless charging system is a DC/DC converter for balance charging. A practical charging method is individual charging based on status of each battery. In order to realise individual battery charging, SIMO DC/DC converter is being used. Smaller size and low cost are the advantages of SIMO DC/DC converter, however it has cross regulation problem. Therefore, a model predictive voltage control method is developed for SIMO DC/DC converter as such the converter will be operating in the continuous conduction mode (CCM) to suppress the cross regulation. MPC strategy has the capability to track the reference voltage automatically, so that it is being used to control the inverter in the execution of the frequency tuning by following the reference frequency. The MPC employed dynamic tracking property which aids SIMO DC/DC converter to reduce the impact of cross regulation. Therefore, the MPC is used in inverter for frequency tuning and the SIMO DC/DC converter for balance charging A simulation model is built using Matlab/Simulink to evaluate the performance of the wireless charging system. The current simulation results show that the maximum wireless power transfer efficiency is 93% with resonant frequency tuning, and the maximum power transferred to the load is stably maintained with a novel PI impedance matching network, and the cross regulation of SIMO DC/DC converter is significantly reduced with MPC control.
author2 So Ping Lam
author_facet So Ping Lam
Lim, Gerald Lip Giap
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Gerald Lip Giap
author_sort Lim, Gerald Lip Giap
title Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
title_short Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
title_full Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
title_fullStr Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
title_full_unstemmed Design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
title_sort design and development of a wireless charging system for electric vehicles in smart grid
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/61284
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