4.6 Article

Stability Improvement of Dynamic EV Wireless Charging System with Receiver-Side Control Considering Coupling Disturbance

Journal

ELECTRONICS
Volume 10, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/electronics10141639

Keywords

dynamic wireless charging; mutual inductance; stability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1913214]
  2. International Cooperation Program of Shenzhen Government [GJHZ20200731095801004]
  3. University Grants Council General Research Fund of Hong Kong [PolyU 152218/19E]
  4. Start-up Fund for RAPs of PolyU [P0036194]

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This paper discusses the slow dynamics and overshoot issues in the wireless power transfer system of electric vehicles, and proposes a feedforward control solution based on a small-signal model considering mutual inductance disturbance. Experimental results validate that this control method can effectively suppress overshoot and improve system stability.
Receiver-side control has been a reliable practice for regulating the transferred energy to the batteries in the electric vehicle (EV) wireless power transfer (WPT) systems. Nonetheless, the unpredictable fluctuation of the mutual inductance in dynamic wireless charging brings extreme instability to the charging process. This overshoot that appears in instant vibrations may largely increase the voltage/current stress of the system, and even cause catastrophic failure in the battery load. In addition, the speed of the vehicles may lead to untraceable steady-state operation. However, existing solutions to the above two issues suffer from either long communication time delay or significantly compromised output regulation. In this paper, the slow dynamics and the overshoot issues of the WPT system are elaborated in theory, and the small-signal model mainly considering mutual inductance disturbance is established. A simple feedforward control is proposed for overshoot damping and fast system dynamics. Experimental results validate that the overshoot can be reduced by 13% and the settling time is improved by 50% in vehicle braking or acceleration. In constant speed driving, the battery charging ripple is decreased by 12% and ensures better system stability.

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