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SENSORLESS FIELD ORIENTED CONTROL OF BRUSHLESS ...

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Return to the 180° six-step squarewave inverter. The voltage waveforms were given in an earlier<br />

figure that is now redrawn as Figure 4.23 with the states indicated.<br />

Figure 4.23 – Voltage waveforms for 180° six-step squarewave inverter.<br />

First, it is easily verifiable that the neutral voltage waveform is given by Equation (4.4). Next, it<br />

is clear that the phase (line-neutral) voltage waveforms are given by Equation (4.5). What is so<br />

interesting about the 180° inverter is that by definition the instantaneous neutral voltage is always<br />

nonzero (equivalently, the output voltages always contain an instantaneous common-mode<br />

component), yet the same inverter can naturally produce balanced three-phase sinusoids (which<br />

by definition have no ZS component and therefore, no neutral voltage). But the sinusoidal<br />

voltages (or any other 0 waveforms) only exist as an average (equivalently, the<br />

instantaneous voltages are integrated to produce a sinusoidal current). Therefore, the inverter<br />

synthesizes these waveforms by controlling the amount of time spent in each state such that the<br />

average neutral voltage is zero. Figure 4.24 shows the line-neutral voltage for phase-A.<br />

180

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