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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of a Buck Converter and a Series Capacitor Buck Converter for High-Frequency, High-Conversion-Ratio Voltage Regulators

TLDR
In this article, an analytical and experimental comparison of a two-phase buck converter and a series capacitor buck converter is presented for high-frequency point-of-load voltage regulators with large voltage conversion ratio (10-to-1) is highlighted.
Abstract
This paper presents an analytical and experimental comparison of a two-phase buck converter and a two-phase, series capacitor buck converter. The limitations of a conventional buck converter in high-current (10 A or more), and high-frequency (HF, 3–30 MHz) point-of-load voltage regulators with large voltage conversion ratios (10-to-1) are highlighted. The series capacitor buck converter exhibits desirable characteristics at HF, including lower switching loss, less inductor current ripple, automatic phase current balancing, duty ratio extension, and soft charging of the energy transfer capacitor. Analysis of the topologies indicates that switching loss and inductor core loss can dominate at HF. Results from side-by-side 12 V input, 1.2 V output hardware prototypes demonstrate that the series capacitor buck converter has up to 12 percentage points higher efficiency at 3 MHz and reduces power loss by up to 33% at full load (10 A). Some guidelines for inductor selection are provided, and a switch stress comparison reveals that the maximum converter switch stress is reduced by 30%.

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Citations
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Multi-level conversion : high voltage choppers and voltage-source inverters

TL;DR: In this paper, a multilevel commutation cell is introduced for high-voltage power conversion, which can be applied to either choppers or voltage-source inverters and generalized to any number of switches.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Switched tank converters

TL;DR: This paper presents a new class of Switched Tank Converters (abbreviated as STCs) for high efficiency high density non-isolated DC-DC application where large voltage step down (up) ratios are required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Switched Tank Converters

TL;DR: This paper presents a new class of switched tank converters (abbreviated as STCs) for high-efficiency high-density nonisolated dc–dc applications where large voltage step down (up) ratios are required.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Analytical Method to Evaluate and Design Hybrid Switched-Capacitor and Multilevel Converters

TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative method that can serve as a guide to compare and design multilevel topologies for large conversion ratio applications is presented, which keeps the conduction loss and switching loss constant across the different converters and employs the passive component volume as the single performance metric.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interleaved Switched-Capacitor Bidirectional DC-DC Converter With Wide Voltage-Gain Range for Energy Storage Systems

TL;DR: In this article, an interleaved switched-capacitor bidirectional dc-dc converter with a high step-up/step-down voltage gain is proposed, and the experimental results also validate the feasibility and the effectiveness of the proposed topology.
References
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Multi-level conversion : high voltage choppers and voltage-source inverters

TL;DR: In this paper, a multilevel commutation cell is introduced for high-voltage power conversion, which can be applied to either choppers or voltage-source inverters and generalized to any number of switches.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Multi-level conversion: high voltage choppers and voltage-source inverters

TL;DR: In this paper, a multilevel commutation cell is introduced for high-voltage power conversion, which can be applied to either choppers or voltage-source inverters and generalized to any number of switches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analytical loss model of power MOSFET

TL;DR: In this article, an accurate analytical model is proposed to calculate the power loss of a metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (FET) by considering the nonlinearity of the capacitors and the parasitic inductance in the circuit, such as the source inductor shared by the power stage and driver loop, the drain inductor, etc.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency quasi-resonant converter technologies

TL;DR: In this article, a host of new quasi-resonant converters (QRCs) are derived from conventional PWM converters, with a significant improvement in performance and power density.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transformerless DC-to-DC converters with large conversion ratios

TL;DR: In this paper, a multistage capacitor divider Cuk converter was proposed for a 50 V to 5 V converter with high voltage step-down ratio without a transformer and a very small duty ratio.
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