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National Taiwan Ocean University

UniversityKeelung, Taiwan

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from National Taiwan Ocean University (Taiwan). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
19.9K
Citations
756.1K
h-index
241
i10-index
16.1K
Also known as
National Taiwan College of Marine Science and TechnologyNational Taiwan Ocean UniversityProvincial Taiwan Maritime Technology College

Top-cited papers from National Taiwan Ocean University

Knowledge sharing and firm innovation capability: an empirical study
Hsiu‐Fen Lin
2007· International Journal of Manpower1.7Kdoi:10.1108/01437720710755272

Purpose – The study sets out to examine the influence of individual factors (enjoyment in helping others and knowledge self‐efficacy), organizational factors (top management support and organizational rewards) and technology factors (information and communication technology use) on knowledge sharing processes and whether more leads to superior firm innovation capability. Design/methodology/approach – Based on a survey of 172 employees from 50 large organizations in Taiwan, this study applies the structural equation modeling (SEM) to investigate the research model. Findings – The results show that two individual factors (enjoyment in helping others and knowledge self‐efficacy) and one of the organizational factors (top management support) significantly influence knowledge‐sharing processes. The results also indicate that employee willingness to both donate and collect knowledge enable the firm to improve innovation capability. Research limitations/implications – Future research can examine how personal traits (such as age, level of education, and working experiences) and organizational characteristics (such as firm size and industry type) may moderate the relationships between knowledge enablers and processes. Practical implications – From a practical perspective, the relationships among knowledge‐sharing enablers, processes, and firm innovation capability may provide a clue regarding how firms can promote knowledge‐sharing culture to sustain their innovation performance. Originality/value – The findings of this study provide a theoretical basis, and simultaneously can be used to analyze relationships among knowledge‐sharing factors, including enablers, processes, and firm innovation capability. From a managerial perspective, this study identified several factors essential to successful knowledge sharing, and discussed the implications of these factors for developing organizational strategies that encourage and foster knowledge sharing.

Effects of extrinsic and intrinsic motivation on employee knowledge sharing intentions
Hsiu‐Fen Lin
2007· Journal of Information Science1.3Kdoi:10.1177/0165551506068174

Numerous scholars and practitioners claim that motivational factors can facilitate successful knowledge sharing. However, little empirical research has been conducted examining the different kinds of motivation (extrinsic and intrinsic) used to explain employee knowledge sharing behaviors. By integrating a motivational perspective into the theory of reasoned action (TRA), this study examines the role of both extrinsic (expected organizational rewards and reciprocal benefits) and intrinsic (knowledge self-efficacy and enjoyment in helping others) motivators in explaining employee knowledge sharing intentions. Based on a survey of 172 employees from 50 large organizations in Taiwan, this study applies the structural equation modeling approach to investigate the research model. The results showed that motivational factors such as reciprocal benefits, knowledge self-efficacy, and enjoyment in helping others were significantly associated with employee knowledge sharing attitudes and intentions. However, expected organizational rewards did not significantly influence employee attitudes and behavior intentions regarding knowledge sharing. Implications for organizations are discussed.

Fungal diversity notes 111–252—taxonomic and phylogenetic contributions to fungal taxa
Hiran A. Ariyawansa, Kevin D. Hyde, Subashini C. Jayasiri, Bart Buyck +4 more
2015· Fungal Diversity741doi:10.1007/s13225-015-0346-5

International audience

Families of Dothideomycetes
Kevin D. Hyde, E. B. Gareth Jones, Jian‐Kui Liu, Hiran A. Ariyawansa +4 more
2013· Fungal Diversity715doi:10.1007/s13225-013-0263-4

Dothideomycetes comprise a highly diverse range of fungi characterized mainly by asci with two wall layers (bitunicate asci) and often with fissitunicate dehiscence. Many species are saprobes, with many asexual states comprising important plant pathogens. They are also endophytes, epiphytes, fungicolous, lichenized, or lichenicolous fungi. They occur in terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats in almost every part of the world. We accept 105 families in Dothideomycetes with the new families Anteagloniaceae, Bambusicolaceae, Biatriosporaceae, Lichenoconiaceae, Muyocopronaceae, Paranectriellaceae, Roussoellaceae, Salsugineaceae, Seynesiopeltidaceae and Thyridariaceae introduced in this paper. Each family is provided with a description and notes, including asexual and asexual states, and if more than one genus is included, the type genus is also characterized. Each family is provided with at least one figure-plate, usually illustrating the type genus, a list of accepted genera, including asexual genera, and a key to these genera. A phylogenetic tree based on four gene combined analysis add support for 64 of the families and 22 orders, including the novel orders, Dyfrolomycetales, Lichenoconiales, Lichenotheliales, Monoblastiales, Natipusillales, Phaeotrichales and Strigulales. The paper is expected to provide a working document on Dothideomycetes which can be modified as new data comes to light. It is hoped that by illustrating types we provide stimulation and interest so that more work is carried out in this remarkable group of fungi.

The Faces of Fungi database: fungal names linked with morphology, phylogeny and human impacts
Subashini C. Jayasiri, Kevin D. Hyde, Hiran A. Ariyawansa, Jayarama D. Bhat +4 more
2015· Fungal Diversity713doi:10.1007/s13225-015-0351-8

Submitted by JANAILTON DO CARMO SOARES (janailton.soares@ufv.br) on 2018-10-16T17:57:38Z No. of bitstreams: 1 artigo.pdf: 820963 bytes, checksum: e1a8c1a9fb298abbfcec72ba9789cf71 (MD5)

Fisheries Management in a Changing Climate: Lessons From the 2012 Ocean Heat Wave in the Northwest Atlantic
Katherine E. Mills, Andrew J. Pershing, Curtis Brown, Yong Chen +4 more
2013· Oceanography683doi:10.5670/oceanog.2013.27

Climate change became real for many Americans in 2012 when a record heat wave affected much of the United States, and Superstorm Sandy pounded the Northeast. At the same time, a less visible heat wave was occurring over a large portion of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean. Like the heat wave on land, the ocean heat wave affected coastal ecosystems and economies. Marine species responded to warmer temperatures by shifting their geographic distribution and seasonal cycles. Warm-water species moved northward, and some species undertook local migrations earlier in the season, both of which affected fisheries targeting those species. Extreme events are expected to become more common as climate change progresses (Tebaldi et al., 2006; Hansen et al., 2012). The 2012 Northwest Atlantic heat wave provides valuable insights into ways scientific information streams and fishery management frameworks may need to adapt to be effective as ocean temperatures warm and become more variable.

Global research priorities for sea turtles: informing management and conservation in the 21st century
Mark Hamann, MH Godfrey, JA Seminoff, Kingsley Kofi Arthur +4 more
2010· Endangered Species Research634doi:10.3354/esr00279

Over the past 3 decades, the status of sea turtles and the need for their protection to aid population recovery have increasingly captured the interest of government agencies, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the general public worldwide. This interest has been matched by increased research attention, focusing on a wide variety of topics relating to sea turtle biology and ecology, together with the interrelations of sea turtles with the physical and natural environments. Although sea turtles have been better studied than most other marine fauna, management actions and their evaluation are often hindered by the lack of data on turtle biology, human-turtle interactions, turtle population status and threats. In an effort to inform effective sea turtle conservation a list of priority research questions was assembled based on the opinions of 35 sea turtle researchers from 13 nations working in fields related to turtle biology and/or conservation. The combined experience of the contributing researchers spanned the globe as well as many relevant disciplines involved in conservation research. An initial list of more than 200 questions gathered from respondents was condensed into 20 metaquestions and classified under 5 categories: reproductive biology, biogeography, population ecology, threats and conservation strategies. © Inter-Research 2010.

Pathogenicity of a baculovirus infection causing white spot syndrome in cultured penaeid shrimp in Taiwan
HY Chou, C-Y Huang, Chia‐Hui Wang, H. S. Chiang +1 more
1995· Diseases of Aquatic Organisms620doi:10.3354/dao023165

Outbreaks of a disease causing serious losses among populations of cultured penaeid shrimp, including Penaeus monodon, P japonicus and P penicillatus, in Taiwan are characterized by obvious white spots on the carapace, appendages and the inside surface of the body. For this reason, we propose the name 'white spot syndrome' (WSS). Healthy juvenile kuruma shrimp P japonjcus were exposed by immersion to epidermal filtrate from diseased P japonicus and L? monodon which exhibited marked white spot signs. These experimentally infected shrimp resembled the spontaneously infected ones. Cumulative mortalities reached 100% within 5 to 7 d and were significantly affected by catching and temperature stress. A non-occluded rod-shaped viral particle was found by electron microscopy in the epidermis of both spontaneously and experimentally infected kuruma shrimp. Virions were enveloped, 330 + 20 nm in length and 87 * 7 nm in diameter. The close resemblance in external signs and viral morphology between spontaneously diseased and experimentally infected shrimp indicated that the rod-shaped virus may be the main causative agent of the disease characterized by white spot syndrome in Taiwan.

Marine microplastics as vectors of major ocean pollutants and its hazards to the marine ecosystem and humans
Tan Suet May Amelia, Wan Mohd Afiq Wan Mohd Khalik, Meng Chuan Ong, Yi Ta Shao +2 more
2021· Progress in Earth and Planetary Science593doi:10.1186/s40645-020-00405-4

Abstract Microplastic pollutes water, land, air, and groundwater environments not only visually but also ecologically for plants, animals, and humans. Microplastic has been reported to act as vectors by sorbing pollutants and contributing to the bioaccumulation of pollutants, particularly in marine ecosystems, organisms, and subsequently food webs. The inevitable exposure of microplastic to humans emphasises the need to review the potential effects, exposure pathways, and toxicity of microplastic toward human health. Therefore, this review was aimed to reveal the risks of pollutant sorption and bioaccumulation by microplastic toward humans, as well as the dominant types of pollutants sorbed by microplastic, and the types of pollutants that are bioaccumulated by microplastic in the living organisms of the marine ecosystem. The possible factors influencing the sorption and bioaccumulation of pollutants by microplastic in marine ecosystems were also reviewed. The review also revealed the prevailing types of microplastic, abundance of microplastic, and geographical distribution of microplastic in the aquatic environment globally. The literature review revealed that microplastic characteristics, chemical interactions, and water properties played a role in the sorption of pollutants by microplastic. The evidence of microplastic posing a direct medical threat to humans is still lacking albeit substantial literature has reported the health hazards of microplastic-associated monomers, additives, and pollutants. This review recommends future research on the existing knowledge gaps in microplastic research, which include the toxicity of microplastic, particularly to humans, as well as the factors influencing the sorption and bioaccumulation of pollutants by microplastic.

Contrasting the relative importance of species sorting and dispersal limitation in shaping marine bacterial versus protist communities
Wenxue Wu, Hsiao‐Pei Lu, Akash R. Sastri, Yi‐Chun Yeh +3 more
2017· The ISME Journal564doi:10.1038/ismej.2017.183

A central challenge in microbial ecology is to understand the underlying mechanisms driving community assembly, particularly in the continuum of species sorting and dispersal limitation. However, little is known about the relative importance of species sorting and dispersal limitation in shaping marine microbial communities; especially, how they are related to organism types/traits and water depth. Here, we used variation partitioning and null model analysis to compare mechanisms driving bacterial and protist metacommunity dynamics at the basin scale in the East China Sea, based on MiSeq paired-end sequencing of 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and 18S rDNA, respectively, in surface, deep chlorophyll maximum and bottom layers. Our analyses indicated that protist communities were governed more strongly by species sorting relative to dispersal limitation than were bacterial communities; this pattern was consistent across the three-depth layers, albeit to different degrees. Furthermore, we detected that bacteria exhibited wider habitat niche breadths than protists, whereas, passive dispersal abilities were not appreciably different between them. Our findings support the 'size-plasticity' hypothesis: smaller organisms (bacteria) are less environment filtered than larger organisms (protists), as smaller organisms are more likely to be plastic in metabolic abilities and have greater environmental tolerance.

New evidence for enhanced ocean primary production triggered by tropical cyclone
I.‐I. Lin, W. Timothy Liu, Chun‐Chieh Wu, George T.F. Wong +4 more
2003· Geophysical Research Letters529doi:10.1029/2003gl017141

New evidence based on recent satellite data is presented to provide a rare opportunity in quantifying the long‐speculated contribution of tropical cyclones to enhance ocean primary production. In July 2000, moderate cyclone Kai‐Tak passed over the South China Sea (SCS). During its short 3‐day stay, Kai‐Tak triggered an average 30‐fold increase in surface chlorophyll‐a concentration. The estimated carbon fixation resulting from this event alone is 0.8 Mt, or 2–4% of SCS's annual new production. Given an average of 14 cyclones passing over the SCS annually, we suggest the long‐neglected contribution of tropical cyclones to SCS's annual new production may be as much as 20–30%.

A global multiproxy database for temperature reconstructions of the Common Era
Julien Emile‐Geay, Nicholas P. McKay, Darrell S. Kaufman, Lucien von Gunten +4 more
2017· Scientific Data528doi:10.1038/sdata.2017.88

Reproducible climate reconstructions of the Common Era (1 CE to present) are key to placing industrial-era warming into the context of natural climatic variability. Here we present a community-sourced database of temperature-sensitive proxy records from the PAGES2k initiative. The database gathers 692 records from 648 locations, including all continental regions and major ocean basins. The records are from trees, ice, sediment, corals, speleothems, documentary evidence, and other archives. They range in length from 50 to 2000 years, with a median of 547 years, while temporal resolution ranges from biweekly to centennial. Nearly half of the proxy time series are significantly correlated with HadCRUT4.2 surface temperature over the period 1850-2014. Global temperature composites show a remarkable degree of coherence between high- and low-resolution archives, with broadly similar patterns across archive types, terrestrial versus marine locations, and screening criteria. The database is suited to investigations of global and regional temperature variability over the Common Era, and is shared in the Linked Paleo Data (LiPD) format, including serializations in Matlab, R and Python.

Super-Cationic Carbon Quantum Dots Synthesized from Spermidine as an Eye Drop Formulation for Topical Treatment of Bacterial Keratitis
Hong‐Jyuan Jian, Ren-Siang Wu, Tzu‐Yu Lin, Yujia Li +4 more
2017· ACS Nano500doi:10.1021/acsnano.7b01023

are a promising antibacterial candidate for clinical applications in treating eye-related bacterial infections and even persistent bacteria-induced infections.

Detection of baculovirus associated with white spot syndrome (WSBV) in penaeid shrimps using polymerase chain reaction
Chu‐Fang Lo, JH Leu, CH Ho, CH Chen +4 more
1996· Diseases of Aquatic Organisms495doi:10.3354/dao025133

White spot syndrome associated baculovlrus (WSBV) is the causative agent of a dlsease which has recently caused high shrimp mortahties and severe damage to shrimp cultures. In thls study, a strain of WSBV from black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon was used to develop a diagnostlc tool for the detection of WSBV and related agent lnfect~ons in shnmp The vlnons were punfied from P monodon Infected with LVSBV V~ral genomlc DNA was extracted from purlfled vinons by treatlng the vln- ons \ n t h proteinase K dnd cetyltnmethylammonium bromlde (CTAB) followed by phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation A qualitative assessment Ivas performed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analys~s on the viral DNA and primers specif~c to shrimp genomic DNA in order to mon-~t o r shrimp DNA contamination In the viral genomic DNA preparations A WSBV genomlc DNA llbrary was constructed and based upon the sequence of the cloned WSBV DNA fragment, we deslgned a LVSBV-specific prlmer set for PCR to detect WSBV Infection in penaeld shrimp Samples which contained WSBV DNA yielded a n evident ampl~f~catlon product showing the expected moblllty of a 1447-bp DNA fragment whereas n u c l e ~c aclds extracted from tissue samples of clln~cally healthy shnmp showed no such DNA fragment, thereby confirming the speclficity of our pnmers By PCR with thls prlmer set, ~t was demonstrated that the causative agents of white spot syndrome in different shnmp specles are closely related An effective diagnostlc tool is thus provided for screening shnmp for \.VSBV infections, and may be important In preventing the further spread of this d ~s e a s e

Fungal diversity notes 1–110: taxonomic and phylogenetic contributions to fungal species
Jian‐Kui Liu, Kevin D. Hyde, E. B. Gareth Jones, Hiran A. Ariyawansa +4 more
2015· Fungal Diversity467doi:10.1007/s13225-015-0324-y

This paper is a compilation of notes on 110 fungal taxa, including one new family, 10 new genera, and 76 new species, representing a wide taxonomic and geographic range. The new family, Paradictyoarthriniaceae is introduced based on its distinct lineage in Dothideomycetes and its unique morphology. The family is sister to Biatriosporaceae and Roussoellaceae. The new genera are Allophaeosphaeria (Phaeosphaeriaceae), Amphibambusa (Amphisphaeriaceae), Brunneomycosphaerella (Capnodiales genera incertae cedis), Chaetocapnodium (Capnodiaceae), Flammeascoma (Anteagloniaceae), Multiseptospora (Pleosporales genera incertae cedis), Neogaeumannomyces (Magnaporthaceae), Palmiascoma (Bambusicolaceae), Paralecia (Squamarinaceae) and Sarimanas (Melanommataceae). The newly described species are the Ascomycota Aliquandostipite manochii, Allophaeosphaeria dactylidis, A. muriformia, Alternaria cesenica, Amphibambusa bambusicola, Amphisphaeria sorbi, Annulohypoxylon thailandicum, Atrotorquata spartii, Brunneomycosphaerella laburni, Byssosphaeria musae, Camarosporium aborescentis, C. aureum, C. frutexensis, Chaetocapnodium siamensis, Chaetothyrium agathis, Colletotrichum sedi, Conicomyces pseudotransvaalensis, Cytospora berberidis, C. sibiraeae, Diaporthe thunbergiicola, Diatrype palmicola, Dictyosporium aquaticum, D. meiosporum, D. thailandicum, Didymella cirsii, Dinemasporium nelloi, Flammeascoma bambusae, Kalmusia italica, K. spartii, Keissleriella sparticola, Lauriomyces synnematicus, Leptosphaeria ebuli, Lophiostoma pseudodictyosporium, L. ravennicum, Lophiotrema eburnoides, Montagnula graminicola, Multiseptospora thailandica, Myrothecium macrosporum, Natantispora unipolaris, Neogaeumannomyces bambusicola, Neosetophoma clematidis, N. italica, Oxydothis atypica, Palmiascoma gregariascomum, Paraconiothyrium nelloi, P. thysanolaenae, Paradictyoarthrinium tectonicola, Paralecia pratorum, Paraphaeosphaeria spartii, Pestalotiopsis digitalis, P. dracontomelon, P. italiana, Phaeoisaria pseudoclematidis, Phragmocapnias philippinensis, Pseudocamarosporium cotinae, Pseudocercospora tamarindi, Pseudotrichia rubriostiolata, P. thailandica, Psiloglonium multiseptatum, Saagaromyces mangrovei, Sarimanas pseudofluviatile, S. shirakamiense, Tothia spartii, Trichomerium siamensis, Wojnowicia dactylidicola, W. dactylidis and W. lonicerae. The Basidiomycota Agaricus flavicentrus, A. hanthanaensis, A. parvibicolor, A. sodalis, Cantharellus luteostipitatus, Lactarius atrobrunneus, L. politus, Phylloporia dependens and Russula cortinarioides are also introduced. Epitypifications or reference specimens are designated for Hapalocystis berkeleyi, Meliola tamarindi, Pallidocercospora acaciigena, Phaeosphaeria musae, Plenodomus agnitus, Psiloglonium colihuae, P. sasicola and Zasmidium musae while notes and/or new sequence data are provided for Annulohypoxylon leptascum, A. nitens, A. stygium, Biscogniauxia marginata, Fasciatispora nypae, Hypoxylon fendleri, H. monticulosum, Leptosphaeria doliolum, Microsphaeropsis olivacea, Neomicrothyrium, Paraleptosphaeria nitschkei, Phoma medicaginis and Saccotheciaceae. A full description of each species is provided with light micrographs (or drawings). Molecular data is provided for 90 taxa and used to generate phylogenetic trees to establish a natural classification for species.

Comparing Theories of Language Learning Strategies: A Confirmatory Factor Analysis
Tsung–Yuan Hsiao, Rebecca L. Oxford
2002· Modern Language Journal447doi:10.1111/1540-4781.00155

This study compared classification theories of language learning strategies. Results from confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of the data measured by the ESL/EFL version of the Strategy Inventory for Language Learning and collected from 517 college EFL learners indicated that of the strategy theories examined, Oxford's 6–factor strategy taxonomy is the most consistent with learners’ strategy use, although this model did not produce a fully adequate fit to the data. The findings suggest that other possible approaches to strategy classification should be considered. These approaches include (a) differentiating strategies for using a language (“language use strategies”) from strategies for learning it (“language learning strategies”), (b) recognizing the importance of the learning environment, (c) slightly modifying the prevalent strategy classification theories by reclassifying particular strategies, (d) ensuring that the language skills are obvious in each strategy item, and (e) creating a task–based strategy inventory. This study also illustrates how CFA can be applied to the comparison of current strategy theories.

Families of Sordariomycetes
Sajeewa S. N. Maharachchikumbura, Kevin D. Hyde, E. B. Gareth Jones, Eric H. C. McKenzie +4 more
2016· Fungal Diversity428doi:10.1007/s13225-016-0369-6

Sordariomycetes is one of the largest classes of Ascomycota that comprises a highly diverse range of fungi characterized mainly by perithecial ascomata and inoperculate unitunicate asci. The class includes many important plant pathogens, as well as endophytes, saprobes, epiphytes, coprophilous and fungicolous, lichenized or lichenicolous taxa. They occur in terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats worldwide. This paper reviews the 107 families of the class Sordariomycetes and provides a modified backbone tree based on phylogenetic analysis of four combined loci, with a maximum five representative taxa from each family, where available. This paper brings together for the first time, since Barrs' 1990 Prodromus, descriptions, notes on the history, and plates or illustrations of type or representative taxa of each family, a list of accepted genera, including asexual genera and a key to these taxa of Sordariomycetes. Delineation of taxa is supported where possible by molecular data. The outline is based on literature to the end of 2015 and the Sordariomycetes now comprises six subclasses, 32 orders, 105 families and 1331 genera. The family Obryzaceae and Pleurotremataceae are excluded from the class.

The Impact of Website Quality Dimensions on Customer Satisfaction in the B2C E-commerce Context
Hsiu‐Fen Lin
2007· Total Quality Management & Business Excellence407doi:10.1080/14783360701231302

Abstract Business-to-consumer electronic commerce deals with both Web-based information systems and marketing activities. Based on the information systems and marketing literature, this study proposes a research model for understanding the influences of website quality dimensions (system quality, information quality, and service quality) on customer satisfaction. Two system quality variables (website design and interactivity), two information quality variables (informativeness and security), and three service quality variables (responsiveness, trust, and empathy) are identified as critical variables that have an impact on customer satisfaction. Data from a survey of 297 customers of online bookstores were used to test the research model. Confirmatory factor analysis was conducted to test the validity of the measurement model, and the structural model also was analyzed to examine the associations hypothesized in the research model. The analytical results showed that website design, interactivity, informativeness, security responsiveness, and trust affect customer satisfaction, while empathy does not have a statistically significant effect on customer satisfaction. Overall, system quality, information quality, and service quality are important antecedents of customer satisfaction. Finally, the findings in this study are expected to provide helpful guidelines to both practitioners and researchers.

Review of Dual Boundary Element Methods With Emphasis on Hypersingular Integrals and Divergent Series
Jeng‐Tzong Chen, H.-K. Hong
1999· Applied Mechanics Reviews405doi:10.1115/1.3098922

This article provides a perspective on the current status of the formulations of dual boundary element methods with emphasis on the regularizations of hypersingular integrals and divergent series. A simple example is given to show the dual integral representation and the dual series representation for a discontinuous function and its derivative and thereby to illustrate the regularization problems encountered in dual boundary element methods. Hypersingularity and the theory of divergent series are put under the framework of the dual representations, their relation and regularization techniques being examined. Applications of the dual boundary element methods using hypersingularity and divergent series are explored. This review article contains 249 references.

Model-Free Predictive Current Control for Interior Permanent-Magnet Synchronous Motor Drives Based on Current Difference Detection Technique
Cheng‐Kai Lin, Tian‐Hua Liu, Jen‐te Yu, Li‐Chen Fu +1 more
2013· IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics404doi:10.1109/tie.2013.2253065

A model-free predictive current control (PCC) of interior permanent-magnet synchronous motor (IPMSM) drive systems based on a current difference detection technique is proposed. The model-based PCC (MBPCC) of IPMSM requires knowledge of parameters such as resistance, q-axis inductance, and extended back EMF. This paper develops a new model-free approach that alleviates the need for excessive prior knowledge about the system and only utilizes the stator currents as well as the current differences corresponding to different switching states of the inverter. Despite the salient difference of the proposed approach, it adopts a measure similar to that in the MBPCC approach to obtain the next switching state of the inverter by minimizing a cost function. It is noteworthy that the proposed method is easy to implement due to its simplicity and free of any multiplication operation. For comparison purposes, a digital signal processor, TMS320LF2407, is used to execute the two aforementioned current control techniques. Several experimental results show that the proposed method can significantly improve the current-tracking performance.