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Showing papers on "Boost converter published in 2005"


Patent
21 Mar 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a high efficiency power converter comprises a boost converter for converting an input voltage to a first voltage on a first output, a buck converter, a linear regulator, and a voltage detector for detecting the input voltage for preventing a reverse current flowing from the second output to the buck converter.
Abstract: A high efficiency power converter comprises a boost converter for converting an input voltage to a first voltage on a first output, a buck converter for converting the input voltage to a second voltage on a second output, a linear regulator for converting the first voltage to a third voltage on the second output when the second voltage is lower than a first threshold, and a voltage detector for detecting the input voltage for preventing a reverse current flowing from the second output to the buck converter when the input voltage is lower than a second threshold.

572 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a high step-up converter with a coupled-inductive switch is investigated, where a passive regenerative snubber is utilized for absorbing the energy of stray inductance so that the switch duty cycle can be operated under a wide range, and the related voltage gain is higher than other coupled inductor-based converters.
Abstract: In this study, a high step-up converter with a coupled-inductor is investigated. In the proposed strategy, a coupled inductor with a lower-voltage-rated switch is used for raising the voltage gain (whether the switch is turned on or turned off). Moreover, a passive regenerative snubber is utilized for absorbing the energy of stray inductance so that the switch duty cycle can be operated under a wide range, and the related voltage gain is higher than other coupled-inductor-based converters. In addition, all devices in this scheme also have voltage-clamped properties and their voltage stresses are relatively smaller than the output voltage. Thus, it can select low-voltage low-conduction-loss devices, and there are no reverse-recovery currents within the diodes in this circuit. Furthermore, the closed-loop control methodology is utilized in the proposed scheme to overcome the voltage drift problem of the power source under the load variations. As a result, the proposed converter topology can promote the voltage gain of a conventional boost converter with a single inductor, and deal with the problem of the leakage inductor and demagnetization of transformer for a coupled-inductor-based converter. Some experimental results via examples of a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) power source and a traditional battery are given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed power conversion strategy.

540 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An integrated buck dc-dc converter for multi-V/sub CC/ microprocessors with four-phase topology and fast hysteretic control is demonstrated, which eliminated the need for the inductor magnetic core and enabled integration of the output decoupling capacitor on-chip.
Abstract: We demonstrate an integrated buck dc-dc converter for multi-V/sub CC/ microprocessors. At nominal conditions, the converter produces a 0.9-V output from a 1.2-V input. The circuit was implemented in a 90-nm CMOS technology. By operating at high switching frequency of 100 to 317 MHz with four-phase topology and fast hysteretic control, we reduced inductor and capacitor sizes by three orders of magnitude compared to previously published dc-dc converters. This eliminated the need for the inductor magnetic core and enabled integration of the output decoupling capacitor on-chip. The converter achieves 80%-87% efficiency and 10% peak-to-peak output noise for a 0.3-A output current and 2.5-nF decoupling capacitance. A forward body bias of 500 mV applied to PMOS transistors in the bridge improves efficiency by 0.5%-1%.

299 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Yilei Gu1, Zhengyu Lu1, Lijun Hang1, Zhaoming Qian1, Guisong Huang 
TL;DR: In this article, a three-level soft switching LLC series resonant dc/dc converter is presented, which achieves zero-voltage switching (ZVS) for each main switch without any auxiliary circuit.
Abstract: Paper presents a three-level soft switching LLC series resonant dc/dc converter. Zero-voltage switching (ZVS) is achieved for each main switch without any auxiliary circuit. Voltage stress of each main switch is half of input voltage. Zero-current-switching (ZCS) is achieved for rectifier diodes. Wide input/output range can be achieved under low frequency range because of two-stage resonance. Only one magnetic component is required in this converter. Efficiency is higher in high line input, so this converter is a preferable candidate for power products with the requirement of hold up time. For design convenience, relationship between dc gain and switching frequency, load resistance is deduced. Its open load characteristic and short load characteristic are exposed to provide theory basis for no load operation and over current protection. Design consideration of four dead times is presented to assure that voltage stress for main switches is within half of input voltage and ZVS for each main switch is achieved. Finally the principle of operation and the characteristics of the presented converter are verified on a 500V-700V input 54V/10A output experimental prototype, whose efficiency reaches 94.7% under rating condition.

288 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The LCL-T RC as a current source offers many advantages such as easy parallel operation and low circulating currents at light load, and the leakage inductance of a transformer can be advantageously integrated into the resonant network.
Abstract: An LCL-T resonant converter (LCL-T RC) is shown to behave as a current source when operated at resonant frequency. A detailed analysis of the LCL-T RC for this property is presented. Closed-form expressions for converter gain, component stresses, and the condition for converter design optimized for minimum size of resonant network is derived. A design procedure is illustrated with a prototype 200-W 20-A current-source power supply and experimental results are presented. The LCL-T RC as a current source offers many advantages such as easy parallel operation and low circulating currents at light load. Additionally, with appropriate phase shift in paralleled modules, the peak-peak ripple in output current is reduced and the ripple frequency is increased, reducing filtering requirements. The leakage inductance of a transformer can be advantageously integrated into the resonant network. These merits make the topology applicable in various applications such as magnet power supply, capacitor charging power supply, laser diode drivers, etc.

274 citations


Patent
19 Aug 2005
TL;DR: In this article, a power converter comprises a power stage for delivering the electrical power from an electrical power source to the load, a switch in the power stage that electrically couples or decouples the load to the power source, and a switch controller coupled to the switch for controlling the on-times and off-times of the switch according to the plurality of operation modes.
Abstract: A power converter delivers electrical power from an electrical power source to a load according to a plurality of operation modes corresponding to different levels of input voltage or output current. The power converter comprises a power stage for delivering the electrical power from the power source to the load, a switch in the power stage that electrically couples or decouples the load to the power source, and a switch controller coupled to the switch for controlling the on-times and off-times of the switch according to the plurality of operation modes. Each of the operation modes correspond to associated ranges of at least one of an input voltage to the power converter and an output current from the power converter, where the associated ranges are different for each of the operation modes.

274 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a high boost converter with a voltage multiplier and a coupled inductor was proposed to boost low input voltage to high voltage output with low duty cycle, and the secondary voltage was rectified using voltage multiplier.
Abstract: With the increasing demand for renewable energy, distributed power included in fuel cells have been studied and developed as a future energy source. For this system, a power conversion circuit is necessary to interface the generated power to the utility. In many cases, a high step-up DC/DC converter is needed to boost low input voltage to high voltage output. Conventional methods using cascade DC/DC converters cause extra complexity and higher cost. The conventional topologies to get high output voltage use flyback DC/DC converters. They have the leakage components that cause stress and loss of energy that results in low efficiency. This paper presents a high boost converter with a voltage multiplier and a coupled inductor. The secondary voltage of the coupled inductor is rectified using a voltage multiplier. High boost voltage is obtained with low duty cycle. Theoretical analysis and experimental results verify the proposed solutions using a 300 W prototype.

262 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
24 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the working principles and design equations of four different isolated, bi-directional DC to DC converter topologies (a dual active bridge converter, a series resonant converter and two multiple stage topologies) were presented for a 2 kW battery charger that can be operated in a wide input and output voltage range.
Abstract: The working principles and design equations of four different isolated, bi-directional DC to DC converter topologies (a dual active bridge converter, a series resonant converter and two multiple stage topologies) for a 2 kW bi-directional battery charger that can be operated in a wide input and output voltage range are presented in this paper. The results of a detailed mathematical analysis of the converter topologies as well as digital simulation results are used to select the most efficient topology for this specific converter application, where the two-stage series resonant converter is identified to be the most promising, with up to 90% efficiency at rated power.

252 citations


Patent
22 Mar 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a single-stage power converter for driving many number of light-emitting-diode (LED) was presented, where the power converter converts an AC input voltage into DC current source and regulates the current flowing into the LED.
Abstract: This invention presents a single-stage power converter for driving many number of Light-Emitting-Diode (LED). The power converter converts an AC input voltage into DC current source and regulates the current flowing into the LED. In addition, the AC input current is controlled to have a sinusoidal waveform synchronized with the AC input voltage so that AC input Power Factor is corrected. Hence, both of Power Factor Correction (PFC) and LED current regulation are obtained simultaneously by using a single power conversion stage. So higher efficiency with low cost can be obtained.

223 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
16 Jun 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the buck-boost type of active clamp is used to eliminate voltage spike induced from the trapped energy in leakage inductor of the coupled inductors of the converter.
Abstract: This paper proposes a boost converter with coupled inductors and buck-boost type of active clamp. In the converter, the active-clamp circuit is used to eliminate voltage spike induced from the trapped energy in leakage inductor of the coupled inductors. The active switch in the converter can still sustain a proper duty ratio when even under high step-up applications, reducing voltage and current stresses significantly. Moreover, since both main and auxiliary switches can be turned on with zero voltage switching, switching loss can be reduced and conversion efficiency therefore can be improved significantly. A 200 W prototype of the proposed boost converter was built from which experiment results have shown that efficiency can reach as high as 92% and surge can be suppressed effectively. It is relatively feasible for applications to fuel cell and battery power conversion

206 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a three-phase transformer-isolated dc/dc converter utilizing phase shift (PS) modulation is proposed, which can boost the voltage significantly and operate at current levels above 240 A on the source side.
Abstract: An efficient dc/dc converter is needed as the interface between a low-voltage fuel cell source and a high-voltage bus for inverter operation. In this paper, a three-phase transformer-isolated dc/dc converter utilizing phase-shift (PS) modulation is proposed. The converter must be able to boost the voltage significantly and operate at current levels above 240 A on the source side. Key features of the proposed converter include reduced transformer turns ratio by a factor of two while maintaining the same output voltage, reduced size of passive components including output filter and input dc bus capacitor using three-phase interleaving, eliminated inductor current ripple at PS angles above 120/spl deg/, and achieved soft switching over a wide load range without auxiliary circuitry. The proposed converter has been analyzed, simulated, and implemented in hardware. An efficiency of above 96% was achieved using the prototype unit. Experimental results were used to verify all designs and analyses.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the use of a multiple-input buck-boost converter for budgeting power between different energy sources is discussed, and it is shown mathematically that the idealized converter can accommodate arbitrary power commands for each input source while maintaining a prescribed output voltage.
Abstract: The use of a multiple-input buck-boost converter for budgeting power between different energy sources is discussed. It is shown mathematically that the idealized converter can accommodate arbitrary power commands for each input source while maintaining a prescribed output voltage. Power budgeting is demonstrated experimentally for a real converter under various circumstances, including a two-input (solar and line-powered) system. A closed-loop control example involving simultaneous tracking of output voltage and set-point tracking of the solar array shows that an autonomous system is realizable.

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Jul 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a high-efficiency converter with high voltage gain applied to a step-up power conversion is presented, where a high magnetising current charges the primary winding of the coupled inductor, and the clamped capacitor is discharged to the auxiliary capacitor when the switch is turned on.
Abstract: A high-efficiency converter with high voltage gain applied to a step-up power conversion is presented In the proposed strategy, a high magnetising current charges the primary winding of the coupled inductor, and the clamped capacitor is discharged to the auxiliary capacitor when the switch is turned on In contrast, the magnetising current flows continuously to boost the voltage in the secondary winding of the coupled inductor, and the voltages across the secondary winding of the coupled inductor, the clamped capacitor and the auxiliary capacitor are connected in series to charge the output circuit Thus, the related voltage gain is higher than in conventional converter circuits Moreover, this scheme has soft-switching and voltage-clamped properties, ie the switch is turned on under zero-current switching and its sustainable voltage is comparatively lower than the output voltage, so that it can select low-voltage low-conduction-loss devices and there are no reverse-recovery currents within the diodes in this circuit In addition, closed-loop control methodology is utilised in the proposed scheme to overcome the voltage drift problem of the power source under the load variations As a result, the proposed converter topology can promote the voltage gain for a conventional boost converter with a single inductor, and deal with the problem of the leakage inductor and demagnetisation of the transformer for a coupled-inductor-based converter Some experimental results via examples of a proton exchange membrane fuel cell power source and a traditional battery are given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed power conversion strategy

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new family of simple topologies of single-phase PWM ac-ac converters with a minimal number of switches are proposed: voltage-fed Z-source converter and current- fed Z- source converter, which have unique features: providing a larger range of output ac voltage with buck-boost, reversing or maintaining phase angle, reducing in-rush and harmonic current, and improving reliability.
Abstract: The letter proposes a new family of simple topologies of single-phase PWM ac-ac converters with a minimal number of switches: voltage-fed Z-source converter and current-fed Z-source converter. By PWM duty-ratio control, they become "solid-state transformers" with a continuously variable turns ratio. All the proposed ac-ac converters in this paper employ only two switches. Compared to the existing PWM ac-ac converter circuits, they have unique features: providing a larger range of output ac voltage with buck-boost, reversing or maintaining phase angle, reducing in-rush and harmonic current, and improving reliability. The operating principle and control method of the proposed topologies are presented. Analysis, simulation, and experimental results are given using the voltage-fed Z-source ac-ac converter as an example. The analysis can be easily extended to other converters of the proposed family. The proposed converters could be used in voltage regulation, power regulation, and so on.

Journal ArticleDOI
H.-B. Shin1, J.-G. Park1, S.-K. Chung1, H.-W. Lee1, T.A. Lipo1 
06 May 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a generalised steady-state analysis of the multi-phase interleaved boost converter with coupled inductors operated in continuous inductor current mode is addressed, where analytical expressions for efficiency, inductor and input currents, and output voltage are derived from the transformed average state-space model.
Abstract: The generalised steady-state analysis of the multi-phase interleaved boost converter with coupled inductors operated in continuous inductor current mode is addressed. The analytical expressions for efficiency, inductor and input currents, and output voltage are derived from the transformed average state-space model. Generalised expressions for the input and inductor current ripples and the output voltage ripple are also derived for various inductor couplings and the characteristics are analysed according to the inductor couplings. The steady-state performance is verified experimentally.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an integrated magnetic structure is proposed for these windings so that the same magnetic cores used in the buck converter can be used here as well, and a lossless clamp circuit is implemented to limit the device voltage stress and to recover inductor leakage energy.
Abstract: This paper analyzes the fundamental limitations of the buck converter for high-frequency, high-step-down dc-dc conversion. Further modification with additional coupled windings in the buck converter yields a novel topology, which significantly improves the efficiency without compromising the transient response. An integrated magnetic structure is proposed for these windings so that the same magnetic cores used in the buck converter can be used here as well. Furthermore, it is easy to implement a lossless clamp circuit to limit the device voltage stress and to recover inductor leakage energy. This new topology is applied for a 12V-to-1.5V/25A voltage regulator module (VRM) design. At a switching frequency of 2MHz, over 80% full-load efficiency is achieved, which is 8% higher than that of the conventional buck converter.

Patent
29 Nov 2005
TL;DR: In this article, a converter circuit generates an output current from the solar cell power source using a switch mode power converter and a control loop is closed around the input voltage to the converter circuit and not around the output voltage.
Abstract: The present invention provides a converter circuit (300) and accompanying switch mode power conversion (315) technique to efficiently capture the power generated from a solar cell array (210) that would normally have been lost, for example, under reduced incident solar radiation. In an embodiment of the invention, the converter circuit generates an output current from the solar cell power source using a switch mode power converter. A control loop is closed around the input voltage to the converter circuit and not around the output voltage. The output voltage is allowed to float, being clamped by the loading conditions. If the outputs from multiple units are tied together, the currents will sum. If the output(s) are connected to a battery (220), the battery's potential will clamp the voltage during charge. This technique allows all solar cells in an array that are producing power and connected in parallel to work at their peak efficiency.

Patent
Fred Flett1, Lizhi Zhu1, Sayeed Ahmed1, Ajay V Patwardhan1, Roy I. Davis1 
20 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a power converter system topology that consists of a first DC/DC converter to pull a positive rail of a high voltage bus up, while a second DC-DC converter pushes a negative rail of the high voltage buses down.
Abstract: Power converter system topologies comprise a first DC/DC converter to pull a positive rail of a high voltage bus up, while a second DC/DC converter pushes a negative rail of the high voltage bus down. One or both the DC/DC converters may be bi-directional. Such topologies are suitable for use with separate primary power sources, and/or auxiliary power sources. Such topologies may include a DC/AC converter, which may be bi-directional. Such topologies may include one or more auxiliary DC/DC converters, which may be bi-directional. Multiple substrates, including at least one stacked above another may enhance packaging.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a buck-boost transformation topology was used for MP point tracking in a coupled inductor SEPIC converter for the purpose of achieving almost ripple-free array current.
Abstract: The photovoltaic (PV) generator exhibits a nonlinear i-v characteristic and its maximum power (MP) point varies with solar insolation. In this paper, a V2-based MP point tracking (MPPT) scheme is developed using a buck-boost transformation topology. Although several buck-boost transformation topologies are available we have considered here a coupled inductor SEPIC converter for experimentation. To achieve almost ripple-free array current we have used ripple steering phenomena with the help of integrated inductor. This integrated inductor not only reduces the magnetic core requirements but also improves converter performance. Mathematical models are formulated and tracking algorithm is evolved. A combined PV system simulation model is developed in the SIMULINK. For a given solar insolation, the tracking algorithm changes the duty ratio of the converter such that the solar cell array (SCA) voltage equals the voltage corresponding to the MP point. This is done by the tracking algorithm, which mainly computes the power proportional to square of terminal voltage and changes the duty ratio of the converter so that this power is maximum. The proposed algorithm is implemented in real-time with the help of Analog Device ADMC-401 DSP evaluation module. The tracking program is developed to perform experimental investigations using analog-to-digital converter (ADC) interrupt. Using this processor we are able to track the MP within 200 ms. The proposed peak power tracking effectiveness is demonstrated through simulation and experimental results.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new zero-voltage-switching phase-shift full-bridge converter with low conduction losses is proposed, based on the PSFB converter with series-connected two transformers, which features wide ZVS ranges.
Abstract: A new zero-voltage-switching (ZVS) phase-shift full-bridge (PSFB) converter with low conduction losses is proposed. It is based on the PSFB converter with series-connected two transformers, which features wide ZVS ranges. By adding a capacitor, the proposed converter overcomes the disadvantage of the based converter, such as the high circulating energy. Furthermore, the turns ratio of the transformers can be increased as well. Therefore, high efficiency of the proposed converter can be achieved. Operational principles and experimental results for a 100-W (5 V, 20 A) prototype are presented to validate the proposed converter.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a 1-V integrated CMOS current-mode boost converter implemented in a standard 3.3/5-V 0.6-/spl mu/m CMOS technology (V/sub TH//spl ap/0.85 V), providing power-conversion efficiency of higher than 85% at 100-mA output current, is presented.
Abstract: A 1-V integrated CMOS current-mode boost converter implemented in a standard 3.3/5-V 0.6-/spl mu/m CMOS technology (V/sub TH//spl ap/0.85 V), providing power-conversion efficiency of higher than 85% at 100-mA output current, is presented in this paper. The high-performance boost converter is successfully developed due to three proposed low-voltage circuit structures, including an inductor-current sensing circuit for current-mode operation with accuracy of higher than 94%, a precision V-I converter for compensation-ramp generation in current-mode control, and a VCO providing supply-independent clock and ramp signals. Moreover, a proposed startup circuit enables proper converter startup within a sub-1-V supply condition.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A high-performance single-phase online uninterruptible power supply (UPS) is proposed, composed of a three-leg-type converter which operates as a battery charger and an inverter which reduces the number of switching devices and has less power loss and a low-cost structure.
Abstract: A high-performance single-phase online uninterruptible power supply (UPS) is proposed. The UPS is composed of a three-leg-type converter which operates as a battery charger and an inverter. The first leg is controlled to charge the battery, and the third leg is controlled to make the output voltage. The common leg is controlled in line frequency. The charger and the inverter are controlled independently. The charger has the capability of power-factor correction while charging a battery. The inverter regulates output voltage and limits output current under an impulsive load. The three-leg-type converter reduces the number of switching devices. As a result, the system has less power loss and a low-cost structure. In the determination of the charger voltage, the nominal voltage is derived using the feedback linearization concept and then a perturbed voltage is determined for the reactive power control. The disturbance of input voltage is detected using a fast sensing technique of the input voltage. Experimental results obtained with a 3-VA prototype show a normal efficiency of over 87% and an input power factor of over 99%.

Proceedings ArticleDOI
24 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, an improved boost converter with coupled inductors and buck-boost type of active-clamp feature, PWM control and zero-voltage switching in both main and auxiliary switches is proposed.
Abstract: This paper proposes an improved boost converter with coupled inductors and buck-boost type of active-clamp feature, PWM control and zero-voltage switching in both main and auxiliary switches. In the converter, the active-clamp circuit is used to eliminate voltage spike induced from the leakage inductor of the coupled inductors. The active switch of the converter can still sustain a proper duty cycle when it operates with a high step-up voltage ratio, reducing voltage stress significantly. A set of passive-clamping circuit is adopted to eliminate undesired resonance between leakage inductor of the coupled inductors and stray capacitor of the boost diode, recovering trapped energy. Thus, conversion efficiency can be improved significantly. A 200 W prototype of the proposed boost converter was built from which experimental results have shown that efficiency can reach as high as 92% and surge can be suppressed effectively.

Patent
03 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a dual output buck-boost power converter operates with a single inductor to achieve high efficiency with automatic or inherent load balancing, with one feedback signal being a reference voltage and another feedback signal related to an opposite polarity output.
Abstract: A dual output buck-boost power converter operates with a single inductor to achieve high efficiency with automatic or inherent load balancing. Switches associated with the opposite polarity outputs are driven based on feedback signals, with one feedback signal being a reference voltage and another feedback signal being related to an opposite polarity output. The opposite polarity feedback signal is provided to a comparator with a reversed polarity to achieve a simple balanced control that maintains polarity outputs. The power converter delivers power to each output with each switching cycle and uses a single inductor to achieve high efficiency performance.

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a voltage-sag compensator for series and shunt converters, which is capable of reducing the voltage ratings of both the series converter and the series transformers.
Abstract: This paper deals with a dynamic voltage restorer (DVR), or a voltage-sag compensator, which consists of a set of series and shunt converters connected back-to-back, three series transformers, and a dc capacitor installed on the common dc link. The DVR is characterized by installing the series converter on the source side and the shunt converter on the load side. This system configuration allows the use of an extremely small dc capacitor intended for smoothing the common dc-link voltage. This paper provides a design procedure of the dc capacitor under a voltage-sag condition, and proposes a control method for the series converter, which is capable of reducing the voltage ratings of both the series converter and the series transformers. Experimental results obtained from a 200-V, 5-kW laboratory system are shown to confirm the validity of the design procedure, and the effectiveness of the control method.

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2005
TL;DR: A novel two-phase buck converter suitable to apply the power supplies for MPU, which essentially has double step-down ratio as Eo/Ei = D/2 and high efficiency is realized by reducing the switching loss of the switching elements.
Abstract: A novel two-phase buck converter suitable to apply the power supplies for MPU is proposed Compared to conventional two-phase buck converter, the proposed converter essentially has double step-down ratio as Eo/Ei = D/2 and high efficiency is realized by reducing the switching loss of the switching elements In addition the current ripple of the output smoothing capacitor is improved to the same value as that of conventional four-phase buck converter Moreover the current unbalance between two inductors in each phase is removed automatically without any current sensing means The above fine characteristics are simply achieved an additional capacitor

Patent
27 May 2005
Abstract: A power converter integrates at least one planar transformer (T1, T2) comprising a multi-layer transformer substrate and/or at least one planar inductor comprising a multi-layer inductor substrate with a number of power semiconductor switches (S7-S10) physically and thermally coupled to a heat sink via one or more multi-layer switch substrates.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An equivalent resistance method is developed for analysis, and equivalent resistance formulae are presented for various modes of operation, and the resulting model can be used to accurately predict and optimize converter performance in the design phase.
Abstract: Switched capacitor (SC) converters are gaining acceptance as alternatives to traditional, inductor-based switching power converters. Proper design of SC converters requires an understanding of all loss sources and their impacts on circuit operation. In the present work, an equivalent resistance method is developed for analysis, and equivalent resistance formulae are presented for various modes of operation. Quasiresonant converters are explored and compared to standard SC converters. Comparisons to inductor-based switching power converters are made. A number of capacitor technologies are evaluated and compared for applications to both SC converters and inductor-based converters. The resulting model can be used to accurately predict and optimize converter performance in the design phase.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The design of a switched-capacitor (SC)-based boost converter and a two-level inverter, connected in cascade, optimized with reference to the nominal duty-cycle for obtaining the minimum total harmonic distortion.
Abstract: Two structures, a switched-capacitor (SC)-based boost converter and a two-level inverter, are connected in cascade. The dc multilevel voltage of the first stage becomes the input voltage of the classical inverter, resulting in a staircase waveform for the inverter output voltage. Such a multilevel waveform is close to a sinusoid; its harmonics content can be reduced by multiplying the stage number of the SC converter. The output low-pass filter, customary after a two-level inverter, becomes obsolete, resulting in a small size of the system, as the SC circuit can be miniaturized. Both stages are operated at a high switching frequency, resulting in a high-frequency inverter output, as required by some industrial applications. A Fourier analysis of the output waveform is performed. The design is optimized with reference to the nominal duty-cycle for obtaining the minimum total harmonic distortion. Simulations and experiments on two prototypes, one with a five-level output and one with a seven-level output, confirm the theoretical analysis.

Proceedings ArticleDOI
12 Jun 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a variable speed wind turbine with a step-up dc-dc converter is used to track the maximum power output of the turbine by calculating the speed command that corresponds to the maximum output power.
Abstract: This paper discusses a new and simple control method for maximum power tracking in a variable speed wind turbine by using a step-up dc-dc converter. The output voltage of permanent magnet generator is connected to a fixed dc-link through a three-phase rectifier and the dc-dc converter. A maximum power-tracking algorithm calculates the speed command that corresponds to maximum power output of the turbine. The dc-dc converter uses this speed command to control the output power of the permanent magnet generator, such that the speed of generator tracks the command speed. A current regulated PWM voltage source inverter maintains the output voltage of dc-dc converter at a fixed value by balancing the input and output power to the dc-link. In addition, the inverter can improve power factor and inject a current with very low harmonic distortion into the utility grid. The generating system has potentials of high efficiency, good flexibility, and low cost.