Field orientation principle (Electric engineering)
Enlarge text Shrink text- Work cat.: 93-33661: Tryzynadlowski, A. The field orientation principle in control of induction motors, c1994.
- LC data base, 9/30/93(Field orientation)
- ASTI:in text under induction motors--Control; field orientation scheme; field-oriented controllers; field-oriented control)
- Engr. index(Electric motors; Induction in text: field oriented induction motor drives) under Control (field oriented control; field orientation scheme; field oriented controller)
Vector control, also called field-oriented control (FOC), is a variable-frequency drive (VFD) control method in which the stator currents of a three-phase AC motor are identified as two orthogonal components that can be visualized with a vector. One component defines the magnetic flux of the motor, the other the torque. The control system of the drive calculates the corresponding current component references from the flux and torque references given by the drive's speed control. Typically proportional-integral (PI) controllers are used to keep the measured current components at their reference values. The pulse-width modulation of the variable-frequency drive defines the transistor switching according to the stator voltage references that are the output of the PI current controllers. FOC is used to control AC synchronous and induction motors. It was originally developed for high-performance motor applications that are required to operate smoothly over the full speed range, generate full torque at zero speed, and have high dynamic performance including fast acceleration and deceleration. However, it is becoming increasingly attractive for lower performance applications as well due to FOC's motor size, cost and power consumption reduction superiority. It is expected that with increasing computational power of the microprocessors it will eventually nearly universally displace single-variable scalar control (volts-per-Hertz, V/f control).
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