6,863 research outputs found
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S-Hybrid Step-Down DC-DC Converter-Analysis of Operation and Design Considerations
Analysis and design of a modular multilevel converter with trapezoidal modulation for medium and high voltage DC-DC transformers
Conventional dual active bridge topologies provide galvanic isolation and soft-switching over a reasonable operating range without dedicated resonant circuits. However, scaling the two-level dual active bridge to higher dc voltage levels is impeded by several challenges among which the high dv/dt stress on the coupling transformer insulation. Gating and thermal characteristics of series switch arrays add to the limitations. To avoid the use of standard bulky modular multilevel bridges, this paper analyzes an alternative modulation technique where staircase approximated trapezoidal voltage waveforms are produced; thus alleviating developed dv/dt stresses. Modular design is realized by the utilization of half-bridge chopper cells. Therefore, the analyzed converter is a modular multi-level converter operated in a new mode with no common-mode dc arm currents as well as reduced capacitor size, hence reduced cell footprint. Suitable switching patterns are developed and various design and operation aspects are studied. Soft switching characteristics will be shown to be comparable to those of the two-level dual active bridge. Experimental results from a scaled test rig validate the presented concept
Assessment of novel power electronic converters for drives applications
Phd ThesisIn the last twenty years, industrial and academic research has produced over one hundred new
converter topologies for drives applications. Regrettably, most of the published work has been
directed towards a single topology, giving an overall impression of a large number of
unconnected, competing techniques. To provide insight into this wide ranging subject area, an
overview of converter topologies is presented. Each topology is classified according to its
mode of operation and a family tree is derived encompassing all converter types. Selected
converters in each class are analysed, simulated and key operational characteristics identified.
Issues associated with the practical implementation of analysed topologies are discussed in
detail.
Of all AC-AC conversion techniques, it is concluded that softswitching converter topologies
offer the most attractive alternative to the standard hard switched converter in the power range
up to 100kW because of their high performance to cost ratio. Of the softswitching converters,
resonant dc-link topologies are shown to produce the poorest output performance although
they offer the cheapest solution. Auxiliary pole commutated inverters, on the other hand, can
achieve levels of performance approaching those of the hard switched topology while retaining
the benefits of softswitching. It is concluded that the auxiliary commutated resonant pole
inverter (ACPI) topology offers the greatest potential for exploitation in spite of its relatively
high capital cost.
Experimental results are presented for a 20kW hard switched inverter and an equivalent 20kW
ACPI. In each case the converter controller is implanted using a digital signal processor. For
the ACPI, a new control scheme, which eliminates the need for switch current and voltage
sensors, is implemented. Results show that the ACPI produces lower overall losses when
compared to its hardswitching counterpart. In addition, device voltage stress, output dv/dt and
levels of high frequency output harmonics are all reduced. Finally, it is concluded that
modularisation of the active devices, optimisation of semiconductor design and a reduction in
the number of additional sensors through the use of novel control methods, such as those
presented, will all play a part in the realisation of an economically viable system.Research Committee of the University of
Newcastle upon Tyn
The Essential Role and the Continuous Evolution of Modulation Techniques for Voltage-Source Inverters in the Past, Present, and Future Power Electronics
The cost reduction of power-electronic devices, the increase in their reliability, efficiency, and power capability, and lower development times, together with more demanding application requirements, has driven the development of several new inverter topologies recently introduced in the industry, particularly medium-voltage converters. New more complex inverter topologies and new application fields come along with additional control challenges, such as voltage imbalances, power-quality issues, higher efficiency needs, and fault-tolerant operation, which necessarily requires the parallel development of modulation schemes. Therefore, recently, there have been significant advances in the field of modulation of dc/ac converters, which conceptually has been dominated during the last several decades almost exclusively by classic pulse-width modulation (PWM) methods. This paper aims to concentrate and discuss the latest developments on this exciting technology, to provide insight on where the state-of-the-art stands today, and analyze the trends and challenges driving its future
Design of a bidirectional energy buffer using a switched-capacitor converter and supercapacitors for an auxiliary EIS converter for fuel cell stacks
Fuel cell as an attractive clean energy source has gained a great deal of interest. To increase the durability and reliability of fuel cells, diagnostics systems that can detect degradation and faults inside fuel cell stacks in end applications are highly in need. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), among other methods, is a promising characterizing tool for diagnostics and condition monitoring of fuel cells. It was traditionally only applied to single-cell or short stacks at low-power levels and required special laboratory equipment, but was recently brought to high-power stacks too which was made possible by many technological advancements. This is mainly owing to a growing interest in performing in situ EIS as a non-destructive method without the need for dismantling the stack. Unlike traditional approaches which relied on extra equipment, converter-based EIS provides attractive solutions for this purpose. In this thesis, the design and utilization of a bidirectional energy buffer module composed of a switched-capacitor converter (SCC) and a supercapacitor string for a new auxiliary EIS converter solution is presented. The module is designed towards having a more compact auxiliary converter unit. The design of the proposed energy buffer module is investigated in detail and a guideline is provided considering the application-specific optimal conversion ratio, supercapacitor string capacitance, and the probable limitations imposed by high EIS frequencies on certain situations. In a nutshell, the proposed switched-capacitor converter module (SCCM) consists of a bidirectional high voltage-gain SCC connected with supercapacitor string helps with the compactness and miniaturization of the entire auxiliary EIS converter and eliminating the potential problems of electrolytic capacitors such as bulkiness and limited lifetime due to the impact of ripples. The SCCM energy buffer with a high voltage gain offers a high buffering ratio for utilizing supercapacitors as the energy storage device
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Design Techniques of Highly Integrated Hybrid-Switched-Capacitor-Resonant Power Converters for LED Lighting Applications
The Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are rapidly emerging as the dominant light source given their high luminous efficacy, long lift span, and thanks to the newly enacted efficiency standards in favor of the more environmentally-friendly LED technology. The LED lighting market is expected to reach USD 105.66 billion by 2025. As such, the lighting industry requires LED drivers, which essentially are power converters, with high efficiency, wide input/output range, low cost, small form factor, and great performance in power factor, and luminance flicker. These requirements raise new challenges beyond the traditional power converter topologies. On the other hand, the development and improvement of new device technologies such as printed thin-film capacitors and integrated high voltage/power devices opens up many new opportunities for mitigating such challenges using innovative circuit design techniques and solutions.
Almost all electric products needs certain power delivery, regulation or conversion circuits to meet the optimized operation conditions. Designing a high performance power converter is a real challenge given the market’s increasing requirements on energy efficiency, size, cost, form factor, EMI performance, human health impact, and so on. The design of a LED driver system covers from high voltage AC/DC and DC/DC power converters, to high frequency low voltage digital controllers, to power factor correction (PFC) and EMI filtering techniques, and to safety solutions such as galvanic isolation. In this thesis, we study design challenges and present corresponding solutions to realize highly integrated and high performance LED drivers combining switched-capacitor and resonant converters, applying re-configurable multi-level circuit topology, utilizing sigma delta modulation, and exploring capacitive galvanic isolation.
A hybrid switched-capacitor-resonant (HSCR) LED driver based on a stackable switched-capacitor (SC) converter IC rated for 15 to 20 W applications. Bulky transformers have been replaced with a SC ladder to perform high-efficiency voltage step-down conversion; an L-C resonant output network provides almost lossless current regulation and demonstrates the potential of capacitive galvanic isolation. The integrated SC modules can be stacked in the voltage domain to handle a large range of input voltage ranges that largely exceed the voltage limitation of the medium-voltage-rated 120 V silicon technology. The LED driver demonstrates > 91% efficiency over a rectified input DC voltage range from 160 VDC to 180 VDC with two stacked ICs; using a stack of four ICs > 89.6% efficiency is demonstrated over an input range from 320 VDC to 360 VDC . The LED driver can dim its output power to around 10% of the rated power while maintaining >70% efficiency with a PWM controlled clock gating circuit.
Next, the design of AC main rectifier and inverter front end with sigma delta modulation is described. The proposed circuits features a pair of sigma delta controlled multilevel converters. The first is a multilevel rectifier responsible for PFC and dimming. The second is a bidirectional multilevel inverter used to cancel AC power ripple from the DC bus. The system also contains an output stage that powers the LEDs with DC and provides for galvanic isolation. Its functional performance indicates that integrated multilevel converters are a viable topology for lighting and other similar applications
Design Space Evaluation for Resonant and Hard-charged Switched Capacitor Converters
USB Power Delivery enables a fixed ratio converter to operate over a wider range of output voltages by varying the input voltage. Of the DC/DC step-down converters powered from this type of USB, the hard-charged Switched Capacitor circuit is of interest to industry for its potential high power density. However implementation can be limited by circuit efficiency. In fully resonant mode, the efficiency can be improved while also enabling current regulation. This expands the possible applications into battery chargers and eliminates the need for a two-stage converter.In this work, the trade-off in power loss and area between the hard-charged and fully resonant switched capacitor circuit is explored using a technique that remains agnostic to inductor technology. The loss model for each converter is presented as well as discussion on the restrained design space due to parasitics in the passive components. The results are validated experimentally using GaN-based prototype converters and the respective design spaces are analyzed
A Comprehensive Review of DC-DC Converters for EV Applications
DC-DC converters in Electric vehicles (EVs) have the role of interfacing power sources to the DC-link and the DC-link to the required voltage levels for usage of different systems in EVs like DC drive, electric traction, entertainment, safety and etc. Improvement of gain and performance in these converters has a huge impact on the overall performance and future of EVs. So, different configurations have been suggested by many researches. In this paper, bidirectional DC-DC converters (BDCs) are divided into four categories as isolated-soft, isolated-hard, non-isolated-soft and non-isolated-hard depending on the isolation and type of switching. Moreover, the control strategies, comparative factors, selection for a specific application and recent trends are reviewed completely. As a matter of fact, over than 200 papers have been categorized and considered to help the researchers who work on BDCs for EV application
High power density AC to DC conversion with reduced input current harmonics
PhD ThesisThis thesis investigates the bene ts and challenges arising from the use
of minimal capacitance in AC to DC converters. The purpose of the
research is to ultimately improve the power density and power factor of
electrical systems connected to the grid. This is carried out in the con-
text of a low cost brushless DC drive system operating from an o ine
power supply.
The work begins with a review of existing applications where it is prac-
tical to use a limited amount of DC link capacitance. The vast majority
of these have a load which is insensitive to supply power variations at
twice the line frequency. Low performance motor drives are found to be
the most prevalent, with the inertia of the rotor mitigating the e ect of
torque ripple. Further research is carried out on active power factor cor-
rection techniques suitable for this application, leading to the conclusion
that no appropriate systems exist.
A power supply is developed to enable a 24V, 200W brushless motor
drive to operate from the mains. The system runs successfully using
only 1µF of DC link capacitance, which causes the motor supply volt-
age to have 100% ripple. It is noted that whilst this drastically reduces
the low frequency input current harmonics, those occurring at the load
switching frequency are greatly increased.
To combat this, a novel active power factor correction system is proposed
using a notch lter to detect the input current error. The common
problem of voltage feedback ripple is avoided by eliminating the voltage
control loop altogether. The main limitations are identi ed as a high
sensitivity to load step changes and variations in line frequency. Despite
this, a high power factor is maintained in all operating conditions, as
well as compliance with the relevant harmonic standards.Dyson Technology Ltd and Newcastle Univer-
sit
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