seandeg
Electrical
- May 3, 2018
- 3
Dual Feed Induction Generators ( DFIG ) are used in variable speed Wind Turbine systems. The "variable speed" means that, between lower and upper limits of wind speed, the turbine drive shaft rotational velocity will track the wind speed. So the shaft rotates at a variable speed into the Gearbox. The Gearbox has a fixed ratio ( lets say 1:90 )the output shaft of which drives the rotor of the the Generator. A DFIG in this case.
The Stator of the DFIG connects to the grid, so has imposed grid frequency. The frequency of electricity produced by the Wind Turbine system at the Stator must match that of the grid. If the rotor is rotating at anything but the perfect 1800RPM that will not be the case. This is where the "dual feed" part of DFIG comes in - the rotor is fed an AC signal ( current ) such that the composite signal built from rotational velocity and now current is at the target grid frequency. The current injected into the Rotor windings comes from a Power Conveerter.
The above is my understanding of how the DFIG/Converter type variable speed Wind Turbine operates.
My question is does the physical rotating shaft of the Generator gets speeded up or slowed down by the process ? My guess is that it does not - because if it did them the blades shaft would also gets sppeded up or slowed down via the gearbox operating in reverse, and that means the Wind Turbine IS NOT "variable speed". Which defeats the purpose !
NOTE: I have searched extensively in the multidude of academic papers on DFIG but unfortunately have always lost my way at some point in the math
Any insights or explanations will be much appreciated.
Thanks
The Stator of the DFIG connects to the grid, so has imposed grid frequency. The frequency of electricity produced by the Wind Turbine system at the Stator must match that of the grid. If the rotor is rotating at anything but the perfect 1800RPM that will not be the case. This is where the "dual feed" part of DFIG comes in - the rotor is fed an AC signal ( current ) such that the composite signal built from rotational velocity and now current is at the target grid frequency. The current injected into the Rotor windings comes from a Power Conveerter.
The above is my understanding of how the DFIG/Converter type variable speed Wind Turbine operates.
My question is does the physical rotating shaft of the Generator gets speeded up or slowed down by the process ? My guess is that it does not - because if it did them the blades shaft would also gets sppeded up or slowed down via the gearbox operating in reverse, and that means the Wind Turbine IS NOT "variable speed". Which defeats the purpose !
NOTE: I have searched extensively in the multidude of academic papers on DFIG but unfortunately have always lost my way at some point in the math
Any insights or explanations will be much appreciated.
Thanks