991 resultados para Converter circuits


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Program authorized by Dept. of the Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics.

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"A publication of the Technology Press, Massachusetts Institute of Technology."

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The 1941 edition has title: Electrical circuits and machines.

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"Based on an earlier work entitled UHF radio simplified, by M.S. Kiver."

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Includes bibliography.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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"Prepared by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Insulation Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, under USAF Contract AF 33(615)-2199."

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Cover title.

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New residential scale photovoltaic (PV) arrays are commonly connected to the grid by a single dc-ac inverter connected to a series string of pv panels, or many small dc-ac inverters which connect one or two panels directly to the ac grid. This paper proposes an alternative topology of nonisolated per-panel dc-dc converters connected in series to create a high voltage string connected to a simplified dc-ac inverter. This offers the advantages of a converter-per-panel approach without the cost or efficiency penalties of individual dc-ac grid connected inverters. Buck, boost, buck-boost, and Cuk converters are considered as possible dc-dc converters that can be cascaded. Matlab simulations are used to compare the efficiency of each topology as well as evaluating the benefits of increasing cost and complexity. The buck and then boost converters are shown to be the most efficient topologies for a given cost, with the buck best suited for long strings and the boost for short strings. While flexible in voltage ranges, buck-boost, and Cuk converters are always at an efficiency or alternatively cost disadvantage.