scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

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
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a simple lossless topology for AC/DC power conversion, which achieves isolation between the source and the load, and demonstrated an improved efficiency over other existing switched-capacitor power converters.
Abstract: This paper addresses the design of efficient switched-capacitor power converters. The discussion starts with a review of the fundamental limitation of switched-capacitor circuits which shows that the topology of such circuits and the "forced" step changes of capacitor voltages are the inherent attributes of power loss. Although the argument follows from a rather trivial result from basic circuit theory, it addresses an important issue on the maximum efficiency achievable in a switched-capacitor power converter circuit. Based on the observed topological constraint of switched-capacitor power converter circuits, the simplest lossless topology for AC/DC power conversion is deduced. Also discussed is a simple version of lossless topology that achieves isolation between the source and the load. Finally, an experimental AC/DC switched-capacitor power converter, based on the proposed idea, is presented which demonstrates an improved efficiency over other existing switched-capacitor power converters. The proposed AC/DC power converter contains no inductors and thus is suitable for custom IC implementation for very low power applications. >

139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proven that the proposed topology is able to reduce the leakage current without sacrificing the overall performance of the system.
Abstract: Recently, reduced common-mode voltage (CMV) pulsewidth modulation (RCMV-PWM) methods have been proposed to reduce the leakage current in three-phase transformerless photovoltaic (PV) systems. However, most of these studies only focus on leakage current elimination and neglect the overall performance of the PV systems on issues such as cost, voltage linearity, dc-link current ripples, and harmonic distortion. In this paper, a three-phase transformerless inverter, adapted from the single-phase H5 topology, is investigated. Since the H5 topology has been conventionally developed for a single-phase system, its adaptation to the three-phase system requires the development of corresponding three-phase modulation techniques. Hence, modulation techniques are proposed based on conventional PWM. The performances of the proposed PWM, in terms of CMV, leakage current, voltage linearity, output current ripples, dc-link current ripples, and harmonic distortion are studied and discussed via simulation and experiment. It is proven that the proposed topology is able reduce the leakage current without sacrificing the overall performance of the system.

138 citations

Patent
29 Aug 1996
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a distributed object model for discovering topology data of a network by utilizing distributed object models, which can be used to display various conceptual views of the network at a management station.
Abstract: An internet monitoring system efficiently discovers topology data of a network by utilizing a distributed object model. The topology data represents the devices and interconnections of the network and can be used to display various conceptual views of the network at a management station. In accordance with the internet monitoring system, different sets of topology data are discovered with corresponding sets of computer-based stations, such as management stations or collection stations, by discovering the topology at respective regions of the network. Further, the different sets of topology data can be combined at a management station to derive a global view of the network. Both management and remote stations include a layout mechanism for receiving topology data and driving the output device based upon the topology data and a discovery mechanism for discovering and storing the topology data. The discovery mechanism includes a network monitor for discovering topology data corresponding with a particular station-specific region of the network, a topology database for storing topology data, and a topology manager for controlling the topology database. The management station, unlike the collection station, utilizes a replicator for communicating with at least one other station to receive topology data from a different region of the network and to forward the different set of topology data to its respective topology manager. The management station has algorithms for handling overlap in monitored regions through the choice of a primary station for each object monitored.

138 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new method for fitting planar structures to the measured sets of point clouds using a semi-automated topology generator for 3-D objects, CC-Modeler (CyberCity Modeler).
Abstract: In this paper, we introduce a semi-automated topology generator for 3-D objects, CC-Modeler (CyberCity Modeler). Given the data as point clouds measured on Analytical Plotters or Digital Stations, we present a new method for fitting planar structures to the measured sets of point clouds. While this topology generator has been originally designed to model buildings, it can also be used for other objects, which may be approximated by polyhedron surfaces. We have used it so far for roads, rivers, parking lots, ships, etc. The CC-Modeler is a generic topology generator. The problem of fitting planar faces to point clouds is treated as a Consistent Labelling problem, which is solved by probabilistic relaxation. Once the faces are defined and the related points are determined, we apply a simultaneous least-squares adjustment in order to fit the faces jointly to the given measurements in an optimal way. We first present the processing flow of the CC-Modeler. Then, the algorithm of structuring the 3-D point data is outlined. Finally, we show the results of several data sets that have been produced with the CC-Modeler.

138 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
12 Oct 1987
TL;DR: A simple and unified procedure, called a reset procedure, which, when combined with the static algorithm, achieves this adaptation of an algorithm designed for fixed topology networks to produce the intended results when run in a network whose topology changes dynamically.
Abstract: This paper addresses the problem of how to adapt an algorithm designed for fixed topology networks to produce the intended results, when run in a network whose topology changes dynamically, in spite of encountering topological changes during its execution. We present a simple and unified procedure, called a reset procedure, which, when combined with the static algorithm, achieves this adaptation. The communication and time complexities of the reset procedure, per topological change, are independent of the number of topological changes and are linearly bounded by the size of the subset of the network which participates in the algorithm.

138 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Capacitor
166.6K papers, 1.4M citations
90% related
Voltage
296.3K papers, 1.7M citations
88% related
CMOS
81.3K papers, 1.1M citations
86% related
Integrated circuit
82.7K papers, 1M citations
85% related
Amplifier
163.9K papers, 1.3M citations
83% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20233,701
20227,927
20212,733
20202,663
20192,742