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In electrical engineering, the alpha-beta (\alpha\beta\gamma) transformation (also known as the Clarke transformation) is a mathematical
transformation Transformation may refer to: Science and mathematics In biology and medicine * Metamorphosis, the biological process of changing physical form after birth or hatching * Malignant transformation, the process of cells becoming cancerous * Tran ...
employed to simplify the analysis of three-phase circuits. Conceptually it is similar to the
dq0 transformation The direct-quadrature-zero (DQZ or DQ0 or DQO, sometimes lowercase) transformation or zero-direct-quadrature (0DQ or ODQ, sometimes lowercase) transformation is a tensor that rotates the reference frame of a three-element vector or a three-by-three ...
. One very useful application of the \alpha\beta\gamma transformation is the generation of the reference signal used for space vector modulation control of three-phase
inverters A power inverter, inverter or invertor is a power electronic device or circuitry that changes direct current (DC) to alternating current (AC). The resulting AC frequency obtained depends on the particular device employed. Inverters do the oppo ...
.


History

In 1937 and 1938,
Edith Clarke Edith Clarke (February 10, 1883 – October 29, 1959) was the first woman to be professionally employed as an electrical engineer in the United States, and the first female professor of electrical engineering in the country. She was the first w ...
published papers with modified methods of calculations on unbalanced three-phase problems, that turned out to be particularly useful.


Definition

The \alpha\beta\gamma transform applied to three-phase currents, as used by Edith Clarke, is :i_(t) = Ti_(t) = \frac\begin 1 & -\frac & -\frac \\ 0 & \frac & -\frac \\ \frac & \frac & \frac \\ \end\begini_a(t)\\i_b(t)\\i_c(t)\end where i_(t) is a generic three-phase current sequence and i_(t) is the corresponding current sequence given by the transformation T. The inverse transform is: :i_(t) = T^i_(t) = \begin 1 & 0 & 1\\ -\frac & \frac & 1\\ -\frac & -\frac & 1\end \begini_\alpha(t)\\i_\beta(t)\\i_\gamma(t)\end. The above Clarke's transformation preserves the amplitude of the electrical variables which it is applied to. Indeed, consider a three-phase symmetric, direct, current sequence : \begin i_a(t)=&\sqrtI\cos\theta(t),\\ i_b(t)=&\sqrtI\cos\left(\theta(t)-\frac23\pi\right),\\ i_c(t)=&\sqrtI\cos\left(\theta(t)+\frac23\pi\right), \end where I is the RMS of i_a(t), i_b(t), i_c(t) and \theta(t) is the generic time-varying angle that can also be set to \omega t without loss of generality. Then, by applying T to the current sequence, it results : \begin i_=&\sqrt2 I\cos\theta(t),\\ i_=&\sqrt2 I\sin\theta(t),\\ i_=&0, \end where the last equation holds since we have considered balanced currents. As it is shown in the above, the amplitudes of the currents in the \alpha\beta\gamma reference frame are the same of that in the natural reference frame.


Power invariant transformation

The active and reactive powers computed in the Clarke's domain with the transformation shown above are not the same of those computed in the standard reference frame. This happens because T is not unitary. In order to preserve the active and reactive powers one has, instead, to consider :i_(t) = Ti_(t) = \sqrt\begin 1 & -\frac & -\frac \\ 0 & \frac & -\frac \\ \frac & \frac & \frac \\ \end\begini_a(t)\\i_b(t)\\i_c(t)\end, which is a unitary matrix and the inverse coincides with its transpose. In this case the amplitudes of the transformed currents are not the same of those in the standard reference frame, that is : \begin i_=&\sqrt3 I\cos\theta(t),\\ i_=&\sqrt3 I\sin\theta(t),\\ i_=&0. \end Finally, the inverse transformation in this case is : i_(t) = \sqrt\begin 1 & 0 & \frac \\ -\frac & \frac & \frac \\ -\frac & -\frac & \frac \\ \end\begini_\alpha(t)\\i_\beta(t)\\i_\gamma(t)\end.


Simplified transformation

Since in a balanced system i_a(t)+i_b(t)+i_c(t)=0 and thus i_\gamma(t)=0 one can also consider the simplified transformF. Tahri, A.Tahri, Eid A. AlRadadi and A. Draou Senior, "Analysis and Control of Advanced Static VAR compensator Based on the Theory of the Instantaneous Reactive Power," presented at ACEMP, Bodrum, Turkey, 2007. :i_(t) = \frac23 \begin 1 & -\frac12 & -\frac12\\ 0 & \frac & -\frac \end\begini_a(t)\\i_b(t)\\i_c(t)\end which is simply the original Clarke's transformation with the 3rd equation excluded, and :i_(t) = \frac32\begin \frac23 & 0 \\ -\frac & \frac \\ -\frac & -\frac \end \begini_\alpha(t)\\i_\beta(t)\end.


Geometric Interpretation

The \alpha\beta\gamma transformation can be thought of as the projection of the three phase quantities (voltages or currents) onto two stationary axes, the alpha axis and the beta axis. However, no information is lost if the system is balanced, as the equation I_a+I_b+I_c=0 is equivalent to the equation for I_ in the transform. If the system is not balanced, then the I_ term will contain the error component of the projection. Thus, a I_ of zero indicates that the system is balanced (and thus exists entirely in the alpha-beta coordinate space), and can be ignored for two coordinate calculations that operate under this assumption that the system is balanced. This is the elegance of the clarke transform as it reduces a three component system into a two component system thanks to this assumption. Another way to understand this is that the equation I_a+I_b+I_c=0 defines a plane in a euclidean three coordinate space. The alpha-beta coordinate space can be understood as the two coordinate space defined by this plane, i.e. the alpha-beta axes lie on the plane defined by I_a+I_b+I_c=0. This also means that in order the use the Clarke transform, one must ensure the system is balanced, otherwise subsequent two coordinate calculations will be erroneous. This is a practical consideration in applications where the three phase quantities are measured and can possibly have measurement error.


''dq''0 transform

The dq0 transform is conceptually similar to the \alpha\beta\gamma transform. Whereas the dq0 transform is the projection of the phase quantities onto a rotating two-axis reference frame, the \alpha\beta\gamma transform can be thought of as the projection of the phase quantities onto a stationary two-axis reference frame.


See also

*
Symmetrical components In electrical engineering, the method of symmetrical components simplifies analysis of unbalanced three-phase power systems under both normal and abnormal conditions. The basic idea is that an asymmetrical set of ''N'' phasors can be expressed as ...
*
Y-Δ transform The Y-Δ transform, also written wye-delta and also known by many other names, is a mathematical technique to simplify the analysis of an electrical network. The name derives from the shapes of the circuit diagrams, which look respectively like th ...
*
Field-oriented control Vector control, also called field-oriented control (FOC), is a variable-frequency drive (VFD) control method in which the stator currents of a three-phase AC or brushless DC electric motor are identified as two orthogonal components that can be vi ...


References

Electrical engineering Three-phase AC power ; General references
C.J. O'Rourke et al. "A Geometric Interpretation of Reference Frames and Transformations: dq0, Clarke, and Park," in IEEE Transactions on Energy Conversion, vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 2070-2083, Dec. 2019.
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