koppelomvormers
Koppelomvormers, in Dutch, refer to a class of power electronic converters designed to transfer energy between two electrical domains while providing controlled coupling. They typically combine semiconductor switching devices with a transformer or tightly coupled inductors, enabling galvanic isolation and voltage transformation between the input and output sides. The energy transfer can be bidirectional and can be implemented in DC-DC, AC-DC, or AC-AC configurations, depending on the application.
Working principle: The converter switches the devices to regulate the magnitude and phase of the voltage and
Architectures: Isolated koppelomvormers use a transformer to satisfy isolation requirements; non-isolated variants rely on strong magnetic
Applications: Renewable energy interfacing (PV, wind) to DC buses, battery storage and vehicle-to-grid systems, back-to-back interfaces
Advantages and challenges: Benefits include bidirectional power flow, galvanic isolation, and flexible voltage scaling. Challenges involve
Terminology: The Dutch term encompasses several coupled-converter concepts; depending on context, references may specify isolated DC-DC,