wellingtonex said:
is the voltage measured off the 3 phase or is it optimum voltage rectified? if it were off the three phase I would assume I'd need three capacitors.
The 3 phase alternator is rectified by a 6 diode bridge to produce DC with a ripple voltage. I expect that the peak rectified voltage will be proportional to RPM. The capacitor will be charged to close to that peak DC voltage.
wellingtonex said:
Will the windmill freewheel if the capacitor is full and converter fails?
Yes. The capacitor must be rated for the maximum voltage that the PMA can generate when it freewheels in a windstorm. You should attach some form of speedbrake, something like rubber flaps to your Darius blades that will flip out and become air-brakes at some large RPM. That will protect the PMA and electronics, it will also prevent destruction of your windmill.
wellingtonex said:
Im curius on how the capactor behaves and if its a load for pma at all times or just when discharged.
The capacitor will accept charge whenever PMA voltage exceeds the capacitor voltage. The capacitor smooths the voltage from the PMA. It should not be operated full or empty. Capacitor voltage will average just below the PMA output voltage. The PMA will deliver most current, (charge), at phase peaks, less current in the valleys, so the capacitor is always there as a charge reservoir for the PMA.
wellingtonex said:
Does the cap accumulate voltage or does it just store the peak voltage sent to it?
A capacitor accumulates and stores charge, Q = I * t. A current of one amp for one second delivers one coulomb of charge. The voltage on a capacitor is proportional to the charge stored in the capacitor. V = Q / C.
The switching converter is designed to keep the capacitor voltage close to the optimum for that wind speed.
wellingtonex said:
Should I pick the highest voltage pma that will suit the rpms and torque of my mill?
It is best to have a higher voltage so you get V
cap = V
bat at the lowest sensible RPM for generation. A switching converter can step Vcap up to Vbat if that is needed, but it is more efficient to step down from a higher voltage.
wellingtonex said:
I'm not sure about this voltage step tolerance... when the converter dumps to load I'll assume the mill will respond accordingly with load. If the converter dumps longer... the mill could stall... therefore the tolerance could be adjusted by the length of time each dump takes?
The converter switches at up to 100,000 times per second. The voltage dV due to the bites of energy taken from the capacitor will be less than the natural ripple on the 3 phase rectified supply. There may be several bites taken during the time that one phase is peaking.
The critical thing is to take energy from the capacitor when the mill is spinning faster than is optimum for the particular wind speed. The converter should always wait until V
cap has recovered and is high enough before it takes the next bite. It will not stall. I expect dV to be maybe a couple of volts.
You will need to know the optimum RPM for maximum sustained power at different wind speeds. That will decide the optimum angle of attack of the Darius' blade.
You might gather that information automatically by sweeping power extraction at different wind speeds to build up a map of windspeed to RPM
opt for maximum power over time.