04646nam 2200601 450 991016663480332120200520144314.01-119-26040-X1-119-26044-21-119-26047-7(CKB)4330000000009749(EBL)4709716(MiAaPQ)EBC4709716(Au-PeEL)EBL4709716(CaPaEBR)ebr11275943(CaONFJC)MIL961913(OCoLC)960048785(PPN)225721597(EXLCZ)99433000000000974920161021h20162016 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierElectrical machine drives control an introduction /Juha Pyrhönen, Valéria Hrabovcová, R. Scott SemkenChichester, West Sussex, England :Wiley,2016.©20161 online resource (527 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-119-26045-0 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Electrical Machine Drives Control: An Introduction; Contents; Preface; Abbreviations and Symbols; 1: Introduction to electrical machine drives control; 1.1 What is an electrical machine drive?; 1.2 Controlled variable speed drives; 1.2.1 DC variable speed drives; 1.2.2 AC variable speed drives; 1.3 Electrical machine drive implementation; 1.4 Controlled electrical drives and energy efficiency; 1.5 The electrical drive as an element of a controlled industrial process; References; 2: Aspects common to all controlled electrical machine drive types2.1 Pulse width modulation converter electrical motor drive2.2 Converter interface to power source; 2.3 Fundamental mechanics; 2.4 Basic mechanical load types; 2.5 Proportional-integral-derivative controller in electrical drives; 2.6 The speed, torque, or position control of an electrical drive; 2.7 Control time rates and embedded system principles; 2.8 Per-unit values; 3: The fundamentals of electric machines; 3.1 Energy conversion in electric machines; 3.2 Industrial machine windings; 3.3 Effective winding turns and spatial harmonics; 3.4 Induction machine rotors; 3.5 The damper winding3.6 AC winding systems3.7 DC machine windings; 3.8 The brushless DC machine; 3.9 The magnetic circuit of an electric machine; 3.10 Motor voltage, flux linkage, flux, field weakening, and voltage reserve; 3.11 Motors in power-electronic electrical drives; References; 4: The fundamentals of space-vector theory; 4.1 Introduction to the space vector for current linkage; 4.1.1 Mathematical representation of the space vector; 4.1.2 Two-axis representation of the space vector; 4.1.3 Coordinate transformation of the space vector; 4.2 Space-vector equivalent circuits and the voltage-vector equations4.3 Space-vector model in the general reference frame4.4 The two-axis model; 4.5 Application of space-vector theory; References; 5: Torque and force production and power; 5.1 The Lorentz force; 5.2 The general equation for torque; 5.3 Power; 5.4 Reluctance torque and co-energy; 5.5 Reluctance torque and the cross-field principle in a rotating field machine; 5.6 Maxwell's stress tensor in the definition of torque; References; 6: Basic control principles for electric machines; 6.1 The control of a DC machine; 6.2 AC machine control basics; 6.3 Vector control of AC motors6.4 Direct flux-linkage control and direct torque control6.4.1 The basis of direct torque control; 6.4.2 DFLC implementation; 6.4.3 Shortcomings of direct flux-linkage control; 6.5 Improving DFLC to achieve DTC; 6.5.1 Current model correction; 6.5.2 Stator flux-linkage eccentricity correction; 6.6 Other control principles; References; 7: DC and AC power electronic topologies - modulation for the control of rotating-field motors; 7.1 The thyristor bridge as a power-electronic drive component; 7.2 The cycloconverter; 7.3 The load commutated inverter drive7.4 Voltage source inverter power stagesElectric drivingElectric motorsElectronic controlElectric driving.Electric motorsElectronic control.621.46Pyrhönen Juha517509Hrabovcová ValeriaSemken ScottMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910166634803321Electrical machine drives control2045498UNINA