This paper deals with a hybrid fault-tolerant converter topology. It is performed through the connection of a classical three-phase three-level Neutral Point Clamped (3L-NPC) converter with a fourth three-level Flying Capacitor (3L-FC) leg. The 3L-FC leg actively balances the 3L-NPC neutral point voltage. For normal operation mode, this paper proposes a mathematical design of the filter needed to connect these two different topologies. Experimentally, and thanks to the already existing decoupling capacitors of the 3L-NPC converter, this filter requires the addition of only one low size inductance. When one fault of the power switch of the 3L-NPC occurs, the paper proposes hardware reconfiguration technique based on only two fuses and one thyristor per leg allows a safe post-fault operation recovery. This is achieved thanks to a simple faultdetection method and a new technique that combines fault leg isolation and corresponding phase post-fault connection to the neutral point. Also, a dedicated FPGA-based control of the reconfigured converter is synthetized to ensure power system availability under fault operation mode. The converter fault-tolerant capabilities are addressed through simulation results and original overall experimental validations of the fault detection and isolation and the post-fault operation steps, carried out on a 15 kW prototype converter.
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