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Topology (electrical circuits)

About: Topology (electrical circuits) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 33316 publications have been published within this topic receiving 397651 citations. The topic is also known as: topology.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A newMLI topology is proposed that requires only one dc source and is capable of generating seven voltage levels with triple voltage boosting gain and alleviates the voltage stress across switches such that low voltage stress of not more than the dc source voltage is ensured on all switches.
Abstract: The cascaded H-bridge multilevel inverter (MLI) requires separate isolated dc sources to generate more than three voltage levels and to generate higher output voltage. This paper proposes a newMLI topology that requires only one dc source and is capable of generating seven voltage levels with triple voltage boosting gain. Three H-bridges are interconnected through two bidirectional voltage blocking switches to enable the integration of two switched-capacitors. Unlike the existing two-stage structure switched-capacitor-based MLI, the proposed MLI is a single-stage topology. It alleviates the voltage stress across switches such that low voltage stress of not more than the dc source voltage is ensured on all switches. In addition, capacitors voltage balancing is achieved automatically during operation. The operation of the proposed MLI is analyzed followed by verification through simulation and experimental test of a low power/voltage prototype.

96 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Aug 2005
TL;DR: This work proposes a novel communication efficient topology control algorithm for each wireless node to select communication neighbors and adjust its transmission power, such that all nodes together self-form a topology that is energy efficient simultaneously for both unicast and broadcast communications.
Abstract: We propose a novel communication efficient topology control algorithm for each wireless node to select communication neighbors and adjust its transmission power, such that all nodes together self-form a topology that is energy efficient simultaneously for both unicast and broadcast communications. We prove that the proposed topology is planar, which guarantees packet delivery if a certain localized routing method is used; it is power efficient for unicast-- the energy needed to connect any pair of nodes is within a small constant factor of the minimum under a common power attenuation model; it is efficient for broadcast: the energy consumption for broadcasting data on top of it is asymptotically the best compared with structures constructed locally; it has a constant bounded logical degree, which will potentially reduce interference and signal contention. We further prove that the average physical degree of all nodes is bounded by a small constant. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first communication-efficient distributed algorithm to achieve all these properties. Previously, only a centralized algorithm was reported in [3]. Moreover, by assuming that the ID and position of every node can be represented in O(log n) bits for a wireless network of n nodes, our method uses at most 13n messages, where each message is of O(log n) bits. We also show that this structure can be efficiently updated for dynamical network environment. Our theoretical results are corroborated in the simulations.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed cascade dual buck inverter with phase-shift control inherits all the merits of dual buck type inverters and overcomes some of their drawbacks and has much enhanced system reliability thanks to no shoot-through problems and lower switching loss with the help of using power MOSFETs.
Abstract: This paper presents a new type of cascade inverter based on dual buck topology and phase-shift control scheme. The proposed cascade dual buck inverter with phase-shift control inherits all the merits of dual buck type inverters and overcomes some of their drawbacks. Compared to traditional cascade inverters, it has much enhanced system reliability thanks to no shoot-through problems and lower switching loss with the help of using power MOSFETs. With phase-shift control, it theoretically eliminates the inherent current zero-crossing distortion of the single-unit dual buck type inverter. In addition, phase-shift control and cascade topology can greatly reduce the ripple current or cut down the size of passive components by increasing the equivalent switching frequency. A cascade dual buck inverter has been designed and tested to demonstrate the feasibility and advantages of the system by comparing single-unit dual buck inverter, 2-unit and 3-unit cascade dual buck inverters at the same 1 kW, 120 V ac output conditions.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a mixed-mode biquad circuit using six single-output and one dual-output-operational transconductance amplifiers and two grounded capacitors is presented.
Abstract: A novel mixed-mode biquad circuit is presented. The circuit uses six single-output- and one dual-output-operational transconductance amplifiers, two grounded capacitors; and can realize lowpass, highpass, bandpass, notch, lowpass-notch, highpass-notch and allpass responses from the same topology. The circuit can be driven by voltage or current and its output can be voltage or current. The parameters ωo and ωo/Q o enjoy independent electronic tunability. Simulation results are included.

96 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
27 Nov 2000
TL;DR: This work discusses the previous work done on virtual topology design and also discusses and proposes different reconfiguration algorithms applicable under different scenarios.
Abstract: The bandwidth requirements of the Internet are increasing every day and there are newer and more bandwidth-thirsty applications emerging on the horizon. Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) is the next step towards leveraging the capabilities of the optical fiber, especially for wide-area backbone networks. The ability to switch a signal at intermediate nodes in a WDM network based on their wavelengths is known as wavelength-routing. One of the greatest advantages of using wavelength-routing WDM is the ability to create a virtual topology different from the physical topology of the underlying network. This virtual topology can be reconfigured when necessary, to improve performance. We discuss the previous work done on virtual topology design and also discuss and propose different reconfiguration algorithms applicable under different scenarios.

96 citations


Network Information
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20233,701
20227,927
20212,733
20202,663
20192,742