Uncontrolled Generation in Nine-Phase Machine Drive

Authors

Živa Stare
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering
https://orcid.org/0009-0003-9625-8259
Rastko Fišer
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0740-4775
Klemen Drobnič
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2444-2327

Synopsis

Uncontrolled generation (UCG) is a phenomenon that occurs in electric drives when operating in a field‑weakening and a gate signal is suddenly removed from switches. When the induced voltage is higher than the DC link voltage, a path is created for current to flow from the machine through the freewheeling diodes of the converter back into the DC link. While UCG is commonly associated with three-phase drives, the topology of some multiphase machine drives—comprising separate three-phase winding sets—enables the manifestation of UCG in only one winding set. This arrangement allows the remaining two winding sets to facilitate post-fault operation.

Author Biographies

Živa Stare, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Ljubljana, Slovenia. E-mail: ziva.stare@fe.uni-lj.si

Rastko Fišer, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Ljubljana, Slovenia. E-mail: rastko.fiser@fe.uni-lj.si

Klemen Drobnič, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Ljubljana, Slovenia. E-mail: klemen.drobnic@fe.uni-lj.si

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Published

May 14, 2025

How to Cite

Uncontrolled Generation in Nine-Phase Machine Drive. (2025). In XXVIII. Symposium Electromagnetic Phenomena in Nonlinear Circuits (EPNC 2024): Conference Proceedings (pp. 177-182). University of Maribor Press. https://press.um.si/index.php/ump/catalog/book/963/chapter/477