2014 IEEE 27th Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering (CCECE) 2014
DOI: 10.1109/ccece.2014.6901070
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Comparative study between decoupled control with sliding mode & feedback linearization control applied to STATCOM

Abstract: This paper presents the study of a static var compensator (STATCOM) connected to the electric power grid. The aim of this work is to compare the performances by the use of two types of controllers: decoupled control using Sliding Mode Controller (SMC) and the input/ output linearization control strategy both applied to reactive current and capacitor voltage regulation in terms of reference tracking and robustness. The STATCOM model and the three controllers are developed using MATLAB/Simulink. The performance … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The sliding mode surface is chosen such that an SMC system can behave in a desirable fashion. The controller is designed to guarantee the existence condition of the sliding mode, so the system can be driven to reach the sliding mode surface in finite time and remain on it thereafter [9, 10].…”
Section: Smc Current Control Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sliding mode surface is chosen such that an SMC system can behave in a desirable fashion. The controller is designed to guarantee the existence condition of the sliding mode, so the system can be driven to reach the sliding mode surface in finite time and remain on it thereafter [9, 10].…”
Section: Smc Current Control Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other traditional controllers are compared with the conventional SMC for the custom power devices to prove its superior performance over these traditional controllers. In Bouzid et al, the SMC is compared with the feedback linearization control for the STATCOM. Another version of the first‐order SMC is introduced to control active and reactive power/current, in which the SMC depends on an integral form for the sliding surface; in addition, a boundary layer around the sliding surface is also introduced to reduce the intrinsic chattering associated with the first‐order SMC.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%