Solid-state circuit breakers (SSCBs) have ultrafast response time and bring advantages in terms of modularity and power density. To interrupt DC currents, metal-oxide-varistors (MOVs) are commonly used, which dissipate the residual inductive energy and clamp voltage oscillations. However, MOVs bring two practical challenges. First, MOV degradation creates a reliability issue. An MOV degrades as the number and duration of surge currents increase. As MOV degrades, the size of metal oxide (ZnO) grain is reduced, and the lattice parameters change. It is explained by non-uniform distribution of temperature in the material due to the growth of localized hotspots during surge currents. In this case, leakage current rises which could cause failures.
To address the reliability issue, solutions have been studied. A thermal fuse is connected in series, named TMOV. It prevents short circuits but significantly elongates reclosing process. A mechanical contactor can disconnect the MOV from the power line during OFF-state, but the low speed remains unresolved. In some prior art, 20% margin is suggested to select Vdc,MOV (dc bus voltage on MOV with extremely low leakage current); however, it leads to dimensioning issues. Although the reported methods are useful, but more effective solutions are needed to cut the problem at its root.
As the second problem of MOV, the voltage utilization rate of the main solid-state switch ηv is significantly impacted. ηv is an important parameter to evaluate SSCBs defined as below.
ηv=(DC bus voltage/Switch voltage rating)×100% (EQ. 1)
In MOV-based snubbers, Vdc,MOV must be higher than the DC bus voltage to reduce leakage currents. Also, voltage rating of the main switch must be higher than the MOV clamping voltage VClamp. So, ηv is significantly reduced, leading to two practical difficulties:
(1) It impacts the breaker efficiency and increases the design cost since the number of series-connected solid-state switches in the main branch increases to hold VClamp.
(2) The power density is decreased due to the high voltage components in the main and snubber branches.
Regarding the reported DC circuit breakers (DCCBs) in academia and industry, the switch voltage utilization rate ηv mostly falls below 50%, highlighting the significance of the research in this filed.
Although the MOV reliability issue can be avoided to some degree during the design procedure by leaving safe margins in handling surge currents, it potentially reduces fly in SSCBs.
To solve the MOV reliability issue and maximize ηv in SSCBs at the same time, four new active snubbers are introduced for SSCBs as follows:
(1) MOV with resistor-capacitor-switch (MOV-RCS) using full-controlled switches.
(2) MOV-RCS with half-controlled switches.
(3) Active-MOV with resistor-capacitor-diode (AMOV-RCD) using full-controlled switches.
(4) AMOV-RCD with half-controlled switches.
The proposed active snubbers are extended to bidirectional topologies, resulting in four novel bidirectional active snubbers for SSCBs. In addition to illustrating the circuit analysis and working principle, the design procedure, the operating speed, the MOV energy absorption, and the switch voltage utilization rate of the proposed active snubbers are deeply analyzed. Compared with the conventional passive MOV-RCD snubber, the proposed active snubbers benefit from the following advantages in SSCBs: 1) efficiency improvement; 2) power density enhancement; 3) design cost reduction; and 4) reliability improvement. All these factors are demonstrated in section V.
To validate the presented active snubbers, five SSCB prototypes, including conventional MOV-RCD snubber, are implemented and tested under the DC bus voltage up to 720 V, resulting in 33 sets of experiments. The results show ηv is enhanced from 37.5% to 60%, meaning 160% improvement. Also, neither voltage nor power appears on MOV when SSCB is OFF, which addresses MOV reliability issue and prevents short circuit failure during the SSCB OFF-state.
A. Circuit Topologies
B. Working Principles and Electrical Waveforms
B.1. MOV-RCS Based SSCB
For an MOV-RCS based SSCB in
Before t0: SSCB conducts load current (Idc), Sm and Ss are ON.
Mode I (t0≤t<t1): A short circuit fault occurs at t=t0.
Mode II (t1≤t<t2): Fault current reaches threshold Ith at t=t1; Sm turns off, so current commutates to Ss, and charges Cs.
Mode III (t2≤t<t4): When Cs reaches VClamp, the MOV turns on and absorbs the stored inductive energy of the system inductance LLine. During this time interval, the MOV clamps the voltage across the breaker to VClamp regardless of the system inductance LLine. As VClamp>Vdc, the system current idc reduces to zero with the rate of didc/dt=−((VClamp−Vdc)/LLine). At t=t3, the system current reduces to iSs=iMOV+(Vdc/Rs), where iMOV is the MOV leakage current under the DC bus voltage Vdc.
Mode IV (t4≤t<t5): Ss turns off at t=t4; as Rs≤10 kΩ, voltage on Ss begins rising; while the voltage on Cs and MOV reduces at the same time, reaching zero at t=t5; interruption completes.
B.2. AMOV-RCD Based SSCB
Before t0: Idc flows through SSCB; Sm is ON, and Ss is OFF.
Mode I (t0≤t<t2): A fault occurs at t=t0. As iLine=Ith at t=t1, Ss
is triggered, and it is completely ON at t=t2. To turn Ss ON, a pulse current with the duration of 50 μs is injected into the gate-cathode terminal of Ss. This pulse current keeps Ss ON during commutating the fault current from Sm to Ss; the gate pulse current waveform is shown in
Mode II (t2≤t<t3): Sm turns off at t=t2; DC current commutates to Ds, and charges Cs.
Mode III (t3≤t<t5): vCs=VClamp at t=t3; MOV turns on and conducts the current (iLine=iSs=iMOV); t2−t1 defines the reaction time interval; Current reduces to iSs=iMOV+Vdc/Rs2 at t=t4.
Mode IV (t5t<t6): As iSs reduces below the holding current of Ss (IH), it turns off naturally at t=t5; vMOV begins decaying to zero, and vSs increases to Vdc; interruption completes at t=t6.
C. Voltage/Current Stress on Circuit Components
Regarding the working principle and waveforms, the voltage (vPeak) and current (iPeak) peaks on the components are derived in
Although the snubber switch Ss handles Imax during the current interruption, the duration of the pulse current is typically limited to tens to hundreds of microseconds. In this case, the increase of junction temperature is limited to the die and the case temperature is not significantly affected. Therefore, the prompt temperature rise inside the snubber switch should be considered in conducting the pulse currents during the operation, and the need for cooling systems is mitigated for Ss. While, the main switch Sm may use a proper cooling system during steady-state operation which will be satisfied using heat sinks in this device.
A. MOV-RCS Based SSCB, Components Selection
A.1. Selecting Cs
The design objective of Cs is to reduce dvSm/dt during current interruption. Regarding mode II and interval t1≤t<t2 in
A.2. Selecting Rs
There are two criteria for selecting Rs described below.
(1) As Ss holds Vdc during OFF-state, Rs is chosen at least two orders of magnitude lower than the off-state resistance of Ss.
(2) After reducing fault current to a leakage value in mode IV of
Vdc/iRs,max≤Rs≤(Tdis/(5×Cs) (EQ. 3)
A.3. Selecting MOV
Vdc,MOV, VClamp, rated surge energy ERated, and peak pulse current ipulse are important parameters in selecting MOVs. As MOV-RCS snubber eliminates leakage currents in MOVs using Ss, the design objective is finding VClamp while satisfying ERated and ipulse. There are two criteria for MOV as follows.
(1) According to
(2) A low VClamp increases the fault current extinguishing time, defined as tET=t3−t2 in
VClamp>(LLine·idc,max·Ptr)/Erated+Vdc (EQ. 4)
where Ptr is the transient power on MOV during interruption.
In addition, the MOV leakage current iMOV under the DC bus voltage Vdc needs to be analyzed. As illustrated in mode III in section II.B.1, the current in the snubber switch Ss reduces to iSs=iMOV+iRs after interrupting the fault current in the system. In the MOV-RCS snubber with half-controlled switch shown in
A.4. Selecting Ss
There are two criteria in selecting Ss, including the voltage rating and pulse current capability. Regarding
With respect to
B. AMOV-RCD based SSCB, Components Selection
The selections of Cs, Rs2, MOV, and Ss follow section III. A. In addition, considering rated current of Sm as ISm,rating, Rs and Ds are selected by satisfying (5) and (6), respectively:
Rs1≥Vdc/ISm,rating (EQ. 5)
IDs≥ρ·Ith and VRSM≥Rsl·Idis (EQ. 6)
where IDs is current flowing through Ds; ρ>1 maintains a safe margin; VRSM is the surge reverse voltage of Ds, and Idis is peak discharge current of Cs during turning Sm on.
A. Operating Speed Analysis
A. 1. Reaction Time Interval
The reaction interval in the proposed active snubbers of
Compared with the conventional MOV-RCD, the proposed MOV-RCS snubber presents the same reaction time interval. For the proposed AMOV-RCD, the reaction time rises by the turn-on delay of the thyristors in the snubber branch. This delay is typically within microseconds (usually below 10 μs) even when DC bus voltage increases to a medium voltage range. Therefore, for DC systems with low line inductance, the active snubbers with full-controlled snubber switches are preferable since they present a faster response speed during interruption.
A.2. Preparation Time Interval
Preparation interval is defined from the reclosing instance (Sm turn-on) to the point in which the SSCB is ready for the next interruption. According to working principle of MOV-RCS based SSCB in section II.B.1, vCs reduces to zero during t4≤t<t5 in
According to AMOV-RCD operation in section II.B.2, Cs holds Vdc during the SSCB OFF-state. As SSCB recloses (Sm turns on), Cs discharges on Sm through Rs1. SSCB is ready for the next interruption when Cs is discharged. Cs discharge time is the preparation interval in AMOV-RCD, which is the same as MOV-RCD.
B. MOV Energy Absorption Analysis
The fault current extinguishing time tET is labeled in
With respect to section II, the energy is approximated as below:
EMOV≈LLine·I max2·(VClamp/(2·(VClamp−Vdc)) (EQ. 7)
For example,
C. Main Switch Voltage Utilization Rate Analysis
According to Equation (1), ηv of Sm can be enhanced by increasing Vdc. In conventional MOV-RCD, Vdc≤0.8×Vdc, MOV is recommended to avoid leakage currents. For example, for V420LA40BP MOV with VClamp=1.06 kV and Vdc,MOV=560 V, Vdc is limited to 450 V. In this case, for 1.2 kV SiC MOSFETs, ηv=37.5% ((450/1200)×100%). While ηv can be enhanced to 60% by the proposed active snubbers as shown in
A. Efficiency Improvement
The proposed snubbers improve the SSCB efficiency ηSSCB by extending the maximum allowable DC bus voltage on the breaker. By considering Equations (1), (8) defines ηSSCB:
ηSSCB=(1−(Ron·Idc/ηv·VSm,rating))×100% (8)
where Ron is the on-state resistance of Sm, and VSm,rating is Sm
voltage rating. ηSSCB can be improved from two aspects:
For a fixed number of switches in series for Sm (Ron is constant), increasing ηv enhances ηSSCB.
Enhancing ηv can reduce Ron, meaning higher ηSSCB. That is, to meet a specific voltage rating, number of series connected switches for Sm decreases, which reduces Ron.
For example, by considering a single C3M0016120D SiC MOSFET with Ron=20 mΩ as the main switch Sm, ηv=37.5% for MOV-RCD snubber and ηv=60% for the active snubbers, and assuming the nominal load current of Idc=30 A, the efficiency is calculated as 99.87% for the conventional MOV-RCD based SSCB and 99.92% for the proposed active snubber based SSCBs, indicated graphically in
B. Power Density Enhancement
Extending ηv increases the power density from three aspects:
(1) It reduces the number of series-connected switches in Sm.
(2) As Sm cooling system takes most of density in SSCBs, lower switches for Sm substantially improve compactness.
(3) Extending Vdc also helps to increase power density.
The heat sink cooling system is fit for 30 A steady-state current. Sm is connected to the heat sink from the bottom; Ss is a C3M0016120D MOSFET and needs no heat sink. Meanwhile, adding solid-state switches in active snubbers Ss does not decrease the power density, which is because:
(1) Ss needs no cooling systems as it only conducts a pulse current in a range of tens to hundreds of microseconds.
(2) Ss holds only Vdc according to
C. Design Cost Reduction
Active snubbers can reduce the cost of SSCBs when multiple switches are connected in series for main switch Sm. As solid-state switches take the most cost of SSCBs, reducing the number of series/parallel switches in Sm leads to a significant cost reduction. There are two main reasons as below:
(1) The number of switches in series for Sm is decreased. As the active snubbers improve ηv, smaller number of switches can handle Vdc and VClamp.
(2) As the number of switches in series decreases, the equivalent on-state resistance of the SSCB is reduced as well. Therefore, a smaller number of switches in parallel satisfies the required efficiency.
NS≥(Vdc/(1200×nv)) (EQ. 9)
Also, to satisfy the required efficiency ηSSCB, the number of switches in parallel NP for Sm is found using (10):
Np≥((NS×0.02×Idc)/(Vdc×(1−ηSSCB)) (EQ. 10)
With respect to Equations (9) and (10), the results are shown in
Regarding
D. Reliability Improvement
Adding a solid-state switch to snubber circuits solves the MOV degradation issue, which substantially enhances the SSCB reliability. As illustrated in section II, during the SSCB OFF-state, the snubber switch Ss holds the DC bus voltage and removes the voltage on MOV. Hence, nor voltage neither power dissipation will appear on the MOV.
Compared with the pure passive MOV-RCD snubber, adding solid-state switches to the snubber branch increases the control complexity. That is, the main control board in SSCBs needs to control the snubber switches Ss as well as the main switches Sm. Also, adding solid-state switches in the snubber branch may impact reliability. On the other hand, there are two points need to be highlighted:
As noted in section V.C, the total number of solid-state switches in the proposed active snubbers is significantly smaller than the total number of switches in the conventional MOV-RCD snubber when DC bus voltage increases, e.g., Vdc>500V, which improves reliability.
Regarding
Unidirectional breakers of
Switches Q1 and Q2, and resistor Rch and Rdis control the charge and discharge process in Cin. The experiments follow a pre-set time-sequence process reported in the literature.
A. Conventional MOV-RCD Based SSCB
Experimental results of a conventional MOV-RCD based SSCB are presented in
(1) Peak voltage on Sm reaches 1060 V.
(2) Maximum fault current is 107 A.
(3) Maximum dissipated energy on the MOV is 307 mJ which is close to estimated value of 398 mJ using Equation (7).
B. MOV-RCS Based SSCB
B.1. MOV-RCS Snubber with Full-Controlled Switch
The MOV-RCS based SSCB with full-controlled switch is tested; the results are shown in
(1) Regarding
(2) Regarding
(3) At the beginning of
(4) Regarding section IV.A, reaction time interval is 2.4 μs.
5) Maximum dissipated energy on MOV is 2.28 J which has a reliable margin with ERated=160 J, and it is close to 1.9 J as estimated by Equation (7).
B.2. MOV-RCS Snubber with Half-Controlled Switch
MOV-RCS based SSCB is also evaluated with half-controlled switch. SK655KD thyristor is used for Ss. Experimental results are displayed in
Compared with
The only difference is the triggering process of Ss. As shown in sections II and IV.A.1, MOV-RCS with half-controlled switch includes a turn-on delay at the beginning of the interruption. This delay is 5 μs for the selected SK655KD. Therefore, the reaction time interval is 5 μs+2.4 μs=7.4 μs.
C. AMOV-RCD Based SSCB
C.1. AMOV-RCD with Full-Controlled Switch
AMOV-RCD with full-controlled switch is validated in this section. The results are shown in
(1) AMOV-RCD extends ηv to 60%.
(2) As
(3)
4)
C.2. AMOV-RCD with Half-Controlled Switch
Experiments are also conducted for AMOV-RCD with half controlled switch. Results are shown in
By Comparing
D. Snubber Switch Analysis
As shown in sections II and V.D, for all the active snubbers, Ss turns on under zero voltage and turns off under zero current, obtaining a safe operation for Ss during DC current interruption.
E. Operation of Active Snubber-Based SSCBs with Zero System Inductance
The effectiveness of the proposed active snubbers in isolating short circuit faults with zero line inductance is evaluated in this section. For the presented active snubber-based SSCBs shown in
E.1. Active Snubber with Full-Controlled Snubber Switches
For the presented active snubbers with full-controlled switches in the snubber branch (referring to
E.2. Active Snubber with Half-Controlled Snubber Switches
For active snubbers with half-controlled snubber switches, there is a turn-on delay related to the thyristors. In this case, to have a reliable operation, there should be a minimum line inductance to slow down the rising rate of short circuit fault currents.
E.3. Experimental Results: Short Circuit Isolation with Zero System Inductance
Regarding SSCB in
MOV-RCS and AMOV-RCD active snubbers based SSCBs have been proposed in this paper. Snubber switch can be a full-controlled or a half-controlled, resulting in four new topologies.
In addition to the conventional MOV-RCD based SSCB, MOVRCS and AMOV-RCD based SSCBs have been designed and implemented. Extensive experiments were conducted under different DC bus voltages up to 720 V to validate the proposed structures, where the reaction time of 2.4 us was achieved in interrupting 183 A. Under extending ηv of the main switch from 37.5% to 60%, active snubbers improve efficiency, power density, and reliability in SSCBs. Besides, design cost reduces significantly when multiple switches are connected in series and parallel in the main switch.
While the invention has been described with reference to the embodiments above, a person of ordinary skill in the art would understand that various changes or modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the claims.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DE-AR0001114 awarded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63299552 | Jan 2022 | US | |
63282360 | Nov 2021 | US |