This invention relates to power conversion, and in particular, to battery-managers that use switched-capacitors.
Many portable electrical devices are used while the device is plugged into an AC source. During this time, a battery manager must provide power to both charge the battery, if necessary, and to operate the device itself. When the AC source is disconnected, the battery manager must switch over so that the battery provides power to the device.
In one aspect, the invention features an apparatus for switching between powering a load from a battery and powering the load from an AC source. Such an apparatus includes a battery manager with an AC/DC converter connected to its input. Either the AC/DC converter or the battery manager includes an adiabatic switched-capacitor network. Such a network is characterized by having a capacitor with charge stored thereon circuitry for constraining a rate of change of the charge at least in part as a result of causing charge to pass through an inductance.
In another aspect, the invention features an apparatus for switching between powering a load using energy stored in a battery and powering the load using energy from an AC source, the apparatus comprising a battery manager, a switched-capacitor network, a battery charger for charging the battery while the load is being powered using energy from the AC source, and a first controller, wherein the battery manager comprises an input terminal for coupling to a bridge rectifier, wherein the switched-capacitor network comprises a plurality of capacitors and first and second switch sets, wherein closing switches in the first switch set and opening switches in the second switch set arranges the capacitors into a first state, wherein closing the switches in the second set and opening the switches in the first set arranges the capacitors in a second state, and wherein, in operation, the controller causes the switched-capacitor network to transition between the first state and the second state at a specific frequency, thereby transferring charge between capacitors and terminals of the switched-capacitor network.
In some embodiments, the switched-capacitor network is in the AC/DC converter. Among these are embodiments in which the switched-capacitor network includes a controller, a charge pump, and a switching regulator connected to the charge pump and to a bridge rectifier. In these embodiments, the controller controls the switching regulator and the charge pump.
In other embodiments, the AC/DC converter is part of the battery manager. There are a variety of locations in which one can place the switched-capacitor network within a battery manager.
In one of these embodiments, the battery manager comprises an input connected to the AC/DC converter, and a step-down converter. In these embodiments, the switched-capacitor network is between the step-down converter and the input.
In another of these embodiments, the battery manager comprises, in addition to a step-down converter, an input connected to the AC/DC converter, an output connected to a load, a first line that connects the input to the output, a second line that connects the step-down converter to the first line at a first node, a third line that connects the switch to the first line at a second node, and a switch that selectively connects and disconnects the battery from the first line. In these embodiments, the switched-capacitor network is on the first line between the first and second nodes.
In another of these embodiments, the battery manager includes, in addition to a step-down converter and a battery charger, a first line extending between the step-down converter and an output to which a load to be driven is to be connected, and a second line that connects the battery charger to the first line at a first node. In these embodiments, the switched-capacitor network is disposed between the first node and the step-down converter.
In another of these embodiments, the battery manager includes, in addition to a step-down converter, a first line that extends from battery manager's input to its output, and a second line that connects the step-down converter to the first line at a node. In these embodiments, switched-capacitor network is disposed between the battery manager's input and the node.
In another of these embodiments, the battery step-down converter has an inductance upon the switched-capacitor network relies to limit a rate of change of charge present on a capacitor within the switched-capacitor network.
Further embodiments include those in which the switched-capacitor network comprises a charge pump, a switching regulator connected to the charge pump, and a controller that controls the switching regulator and the charge pump so as to achieve operation thereof.
In any of the foregoing embodiments, it is possible for the switched-capacitor network to include a charge pump and an inductance coupled to the charge pump. Among these are embodiments in which the charge pump comprises a cascade multiplier.
In another aspect, the invention features an apparatus for switching between powering a load from a battery and powering it load from a DC source. Such an apparatus includes a battery manager having an switched capacitor network that includes a capacitor having an amount of charge stored thereon, and circuitry for constrains a rate at which the amount of charge is changed at least in part as a result of causing charge to pass through an inductance.
Among these embodiments are those in which the battery manager includes an input, and a step-down converter with the switched-capacitor network between them.
Also among these embodiments are those in which the battery manager includes an input, an output, a first line, a second line, a third line, a step-down converter, and a switch. In these embodiments, the output is configured to be connected to a load that is to be driven, the input is connected to a DC source, the switch selectively connects and disconnects the battery from the first line, the first line connects the input to the output, the second line connects the step-down converter to the first line at a first node, wherein the third line connects the switch to the first line at a second node, and the switched-capacitor network is on the first line between the first and second nodes.
In yet other embodiments, the battery manager includes a first line, a second line, an output to which a load to be driven is to be connected, a battery charger, and a step-down converter. In these embodiments, the first line extends between the step-down converter and the output, the second line connects the battery charger to the first line at a first node, and the switched-capacitor network is disposed between the first node and the step-down converter.
In some embodiments, the battery manager comprises the battery charger and a step-down converter. Among these are embodiments in which the step-down converter is disposed such that, in operation, energy for charging the battery and energy for powering the load both pass through the step-down converter, and other embodiments in which it is instead disposed such that, in operation, energy for charging the battery passes through the step-down converter and energy for powering the load bypasses the step-down converter.
Also among the embodiments are those that include a bypass switch control circuit to control slew rate of voltage transitions in the switched-capacitor circuit.
In still other embodiments, the battery manager includes an input, an output, a step-down converter, a first line, and a second line. In such embodiments, the first line extends from the input to the output, the second line connects the step-down converter to the first line at a node, and the switched-capacitor network is disposed between the input and the node.
Still other embodiments are those in which the battery manager includes a step-down converter. In these embodiments, the step-down converter includes an inductance, and the switched-capacitor network relies on the inductance of the step-down converter to limit a rate of change of charge present on a capacitor within the switched-capacitor network.
Yet other embodiments include a travel charger, with the battery manager being a constituent thereof.
Among any of the foregoing embodiments are those in which the switched-capacitor network includes a charge pump and an inductance coupled to the charge pump. These include embodiments in which the charge pump includes a cascade multiplier. Also among the foregoing embodiments are those in which the switched-capacitor network is adiabatic and those in which it is diabatic.
These and other features of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description and the accompanying figures, in which:
Before describing several exemplary embodiments of power converter circuits and processing performed by and on such power converter circuits, it should be appreciated that, in effort to promote clarity in explaining the concepts, reference is sometimes made herein to specific switched-capacitor circuits or specific switched-capacitor circuit topologies. It should be understood that such references are merely exemplary and should not be construed as limiting.
As used herein, ac-dc converters are the same as AC/DC converters; and switched-capacitor circuits are the same as switched-capacitor networks and charge pumps.
In the illustrated embodiment, the first stage is implemented as a switch-mode pre-regulator 16 and the second stage is implemented as an adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18. However, in alternative embodiments, this second stage is non-adiabatic, or diabatic.
The pre-regulator 16 can be implemented in a variety of ways, so long as the essential function thereof, namely regulation of an output voltage, can be carried out. In the illustrated embodiment, the pre-regulator 16 includes a pre-regulator switch S0, a transformer T0, a diode D0, and a filter capacitor CX. A particularly useful implementation of a pre-regulator 16 is a magnetically-isolated converter, an example of which is a fly-back converter.
A variety of fly-back converters can be used to implement the pre-regulator 16. These include a quasi-resonant fly-back converter, an active-clamp fly-back converter, an interleaved fly-back converter, and a two-switch fly-back converter.
Other examples of magnetically-isolated converters are forward converters. Examples of suitable forward converters include a multi-resonant forward converter, an active-clamp forward converter, an interleaved forward converter, and a two-switch forward converter.
Yet other examples of magnetically-isolated converters are half-bridge converters and full-bridge converters. Examples of half-bridge converters include an asymmetric half-bridge converter, a multi-resonant half-bridge converter, and an LLC resonant half-bridge converter. Examples of full-bridge converters include an asymmetric full-bridge converter, a multi-resonant full-bridge converter, and an LLC resonant full-bridge converter.
It is also possible to implement the pre-regulator 16 using a non-isolated converter. Examples include a buck converter, a boost converter, and a buck-boost converter.
As used herein, two functional components are said to be “isolated,” or more specifically, “galvanically isolated,” if energy can be communicated between those components without a direct electrical conduction path between those components. Such isolation thus presupposes the use of another intermediary for communicating energy between the two components without having actual electrical current flowing between them. In some cases, this energy may include information.
Examples include the use of a wave, such as an electromagnetic, mechanical, or acoustic wave. As used herein, electromagnetic waves include waves that are in span the visible range, the ultraviolet range, and the infrared range. Such isolation can also be mediated through the use of quasi-static electric or magnetic fields, capacitively, inductively, or mechanically.
Most functional components have circuitry in which different parts of the circuit are at different electrical potentials. However, there is always a potential that represents the lowest potential in that circuit. This is often referred to as “ground” for that circuit.
When a first and second functional component are connected together, there is no guarantee that the electrical potential that defines ground for the first component will be the same as the electrical potential that defines ground for the second circuit. If this is the case, and if these components are connected together, it will be quite possible for electrical current to flow from the higher of the two grounds to the lower of the two grounds. This condition, which is called a “ground loop,” is undesirable. It is particularly undesirable if one of the two components happens to be a human being. In such cases, the current in the ground loop may cause injury.
Such ground loops can be discouraged by galvanically isolating the two components. Such isolation essentially forecloses the occurrence of ground loops and reduces the likelihood that current will reach ground through some unintended path, such as a person's body.
The switched-capacitor circuit 18 can be implemented as a switched-capacitor network. Examples of such networks include ladder networks, Dickson networks, Series-Parallel networks, Fibonacci networks, and Doubler networks. These can all be adiabatically charged and configured into multi-phase networks. A particularly useful switched-capacitor network is an adiabatically charged version of a full-wave cascade multiplier. However, diabatically charged versions can also be used.
As used herein, changing the charge on a capacitor “adiabatically” means causing an amount of charge stored in that capacitor to change by passing the charge through a non-capacitive element. A positive adiabatic change in charge on the capacitor is considered adiabatic charging while a negative adiabatic change in charge on the capacitor is considered adiabatic discharging. Examples of non-capacitive elements include inductors, magnetic elements, resistors, and combinations thereof. In either case, the result is a constraint on the rate at which the quantity of charge on the capacitor can change.
In some cases, a capacitor can be charged adiabatically for part of the time and diabatically for the rest of the time. Such capacitors are considered to be adiabatically charged. Similarly, in some cases, a capacitor can be discharged adiabatically for part of the time and diabatically for the rest of the time. Such capacitors are considered to be adiabatically discharged.
Diabatic charging includes all charging that is not adiabatic and diabatic discharging includes all discharging that is not adiabatic.
As used herein, an “adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit” is a network having at least one capacitor that is both adiabatically charged and adiabatically discharged. A “diabatic switched-capacitor circuit” is a network that is not an adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit.
Examples of pre-regulators 16, switched-capacitor circuits 18, their accompanying circuitry, and packaging techniques can be found U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,362,826, 9,497,854, 8,723,491, 8,503,203, 8,693,224, 9,502,968, 8,619,445, 9,203,299, and 9,041,459, U.S. Patent Publications 2016/0197552, 2015/0102798, 2014/0301057, 2013/0154600, 2015/0311786, 2014/0327479, 2016/0028302, 2014/0266132, 2015/0077175, and 2015/0077176, and PCT publications WO2014//062279, WO2015//138378, WO2015//138547, WO2016//149063, and WO 2017/007991, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Adiabatic switched-capacitor circuits are described in detail in U.S. Pat. No. 8,860,396, issued Oct. 14, 2014, in U.S. Provisional Applications 62/132,701 and 62/132,934, both of which were filed on Mar. 13, 2015. The contents of the foregoing documents are incorporated herein by reference.
A first controller 20 controls the operation of the first and second stages. The first controller 20 includes a primary side 22 that controls the first stage and a secondary side 24 that controls the second stage. An isolation barrier 26 separates the primary side 22 from the secondary side 24.
The primary side 22 of the first controller 20 controls the pre-regulator switch S0. Opening and closing the pre-regulator switch S0 controls the current provided to a primary side of the transformer T0. This, in turn, controls the voltage across the filter capacitor CX. When the pre-regulator switch S0 is on, the diode D0 is off and when the pre-regulator switch S0 is off, the diode D0 is on.
The pre-regulator 16 also includes a regulator-output terminal 28 maintained at an intermediate voltage VX1 that is lower than the first voltage V1. This regulator-output terminal 28 connects to the adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18. The adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 thus receives this intermediate voltage VX1 and transforms it into the second voltage V2.
The adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 operates in discrete steps. Thus, it only provides coarse regulation of its output. It cannot provide fine regulation of its output. It is for the pre-regulator 16 to carry out this fine regulation. The two-stage design shown in
However, the improved performance of the pre-regulator 16 cannot be completely offset by the increased size and power loss of having the adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 in the second stage. Therefore, it is imperative that the adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 be both extremely efficient and small.
The two-stage power conversion circuit 11 in
The power conversion circuit 10 of
Some embodiment include circuitry for controlling harmonic current and thus boosting the ratio of real power to apparent power that flows through the power supply. This is particularly useful for power supplies that attach to a wall outlet that supplies an AC voltage. An example of such circuitry is an active power-factor corrector 67 disposed between the bridge rectifier 65 and the pre-regulator 16.
Each of the first and second stages 32, 34 is a 2× voltage divider having a maximum voltage conversion from VX1 to VX2 of 4:1. The resulting adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 is designed to accept an intermediate voltage VX1 of 20 volts and to provide a voltage of either 20 volts, 10 volts, or 5 volts. Some embodiments deliver a 15-volt output voltage, which is sometimes required by the Type-C standard. This can be provided by having the pre-regulator 16 deliver 15 volts to the switched-capacitor circuit 18 instead of 20 volts and running the switched-capacitor circuit 18 in the 1:1 mode.
The adiabatic switched-capacitor circuit 18 shown in
In an alternative embodiment, the first and second bypass switches S1, S2 can be turned on and off in such a way that the second voltage V2 slews up and down in a controlled manner. This is particularly useful when there is a maximum slew rate to be met. For example, in the case of a Type-C USB power adapter, where the second voltage V2 is programmable from 5 volts to 20 volts, there is a maximum slew-rate requirement of 30 mV/μs for voltage transitions.
Referring to
A first slew-control switch S8 in
When the first and second bypass switches S1, S2 are turned off and the second voltage V2 transitions from 10 volts to 5 volts or 20 volts to 5 volts, a second slew-control switch S9 turns on and allows a bleeder resistor R1 to discharge the anti-slewing capacitor C6. This controls the downward slew rate of the second voltage V2.
A comparator in
When 20 volts is desired at the output, the second and third bypass switches S2, S3 are off while the first bypass switch S1 is on. The first and second (2:1) switched-capacitor stages are also off. The first bypass switch S1 is an N-channel FET (NFET) whose turn-on is controlled by the current source I1, which is a constant current source, and the anti-slewing capacitor C6 such that the second voltage V2 slews up at a fixed rate.
During the 5-volt to 20-volt transition, the first and second slew-control switches S8, S9 are open and the first bypass switch S1 acts as a source-follower. In this configuration, the voltage on the source of the first bypass switch S1 follows the voltage on its gate, which is given by the current though the current source I1 divided by the capacitance of the anti-slewing capacitor C6. Initially, when the first bypass switch S1 turns on and the second voltage V2 slews up, the first bypass switch S1 operates in the saturation region (i.e., VDS>VGS−VT, where VT is the NFET's threshold voltage). As the output approaches its final level, the first bypass switch S1 transitions into the linear region and acts as a low-impedance switch. A Zener diode D1 clamps the gate-to-source voltage (VGSI) of the bypass switch S1 to a safe level (e.g., VGSI equals 5 volts) during steady-state operation. The transition from 20 volts back to 5 volts is controlled by the bleeder resistor R1, which discharges the output capacitance in a slew-rate controlled manner.
When 10 volts is desired at the output, the first and third bypass switches S1, S3 are off while the second bypass switch S2 is on. The first (2:1) switched-capacitor stage is on and the second switched-capacitor stage is off. The second bypass switch S2 includes back-to-back NFETs, that operate as a source follower when the second voltage V2 transitions from 5 volts to 10 volts. As described previously, the current source I1 and anti-slewing capacitor C6 control the slew rate of the second voltage V2 as it transitions from 5 volts to 10 volts, the bleeder resistor R1 controls the transition from 10 volts back to 5 volts, and the Zener diode D1 clamps the gate-to-source voltage of the second bypass switch S2 to a safe level during steady-state operation at 10 volts (i.e. V2).
Although not explicitly shown in
The AC source 4 need not be a wall-source. Instead, the AC source 4 can be part of a wireless charging system for charging the device. Such a wireless charging system typically includes a base station and a device to be charged. The base station receives AC at a first frequency and provides it to a frequency-converter that steps it up to a higher frequency and provides it to a first coil. The device to be charged includes a second coil selected such that, when brought in proximity with the first coil, the two form an air-core transformer. This permits energy provided by the first coil to be made available at the second coil so that it can be used to charge the battery on the device to be charged.
The conversion to a higher frequency is useful for ensuring that the first coil can be made a reasonable size. Typical output frequencies are in the range of 50 kHz. Various standards exist for the extent of the frequency transition and the amount of voltage and/or current provided by the base station. An example of such a standard is the QI standard.
The first battery manager 60A includes a step-down converter 56 that transforms a second voltage V2 provided by the ac-dc converter 10 into the system voltage VSYS. It also includes a constant-current/constant voltage (CCCV) charger 52 that provides power for charging the battery BAT. The charger 52 includes circuitry for maintaining either a constant current or a constant voltage while charging of the battery, for measuring the amount of charge on the battery, and for providing protection from faults. The step-down converter 56 can either be a part of a device powered by the battery or it can be placed outside such a device. A battery switch S4 selectively connects and disconnects the battery BAT from the load 8. A second controller 64 synchronizes operation of the step-down converter 56 and the charger 52.
When the ac-dc converter 10 connects to an AC source 4, the battery BAT is not needed for supplying power to the load 8. Accordingly, the second controller 64 opens the battery switch S4. Meanwhile, the step-down converter 56 lowers the second voltage V2 to a value a little above the charging voltage of the battery BAT, thereby allowing the CC/CV charger 52 to charge the battery efficiently, assuming the battery is not already fully charged. The step-down converter 56 also provides the necessary system voltage VSYS to the load 8.
However, once the ac-dc converter 10 is disconnected, the step-down converter 56 can no longer supply power. The second controller 64 therefore closes the battery switch S4 so that the battery BAT can supply the necessary system voltage VSYS.
In some embodiments, the ac-dc converter 10 includes an adiabatically charged switched-capacitor converter of the type illustrated in
The configurations shown in
A typical step-down converter 56 as shown in
The third controller 84 in the embodiments of
In the illustrated embodiments, the switching regulator 88 is a Buck converter that includes a first switch SA, a second switch SB, and an inductor L2. When the first switch SA is closed, the second switch SB is open, and vice versa. The first and second switches SA, SB operate at a specific frequency. This frequency controls an average dc current through the inductor L2. This makes it possible to control the voltage at the output terminal of the inductor L2 (i.e., the terminal not connected to the switches) by varying the duty cycle of the first switch SA. In particular, the longer the first switch SA is closed during a cycle the lower the voltage at the output terminal of the inductor L2 will be.
In some implementations, a computer-accessible storage-medium includes a database representative of one or more components of the converter. For example, the database may include data representative of a switching network that has been optimized to promote low-loss operation of a charge pump.
Generally speaking, a computer-accessible storage-medium may include any non-transitory storage media accessible by a computer during use to provide instructions and/or data to the computer. For example, a computer accessible storage medium may include storage media such as magnetic or optical disks and semiconductor memories.
Generally, a database representative of the system may be a database or other data structure that can be read by a program and used, directly or indirectly, to fabricate the hardware comprising the system. For example, the database may be a behavioral-level description or register-transfer level (RTL) description of the hardware functionality in a high level design language (HDL) such as Verilog or VHDL. The description may be read by a synthesis tool that may synthesize the description to produce a netlist comprising a list of gates from a synthesis library. The netlist comprises a set of gates that also represent the functionality of the hardware comprising the system. The netlist may then be placed and routed to produce a data set describing geometric shapes to be applied to masks. The masks may then be used in various semiconductor fabrication steps to produce a semiconductor circuit or circuits corresponding to the system. In other examples, Alternatively, the database may itself be the netlist (with or without the synthesis library) or the data set.
This application claims the benefit of the Mar. 11, 2016 priority date of U.S. Provisional Application 62/306,749, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62306749 | Mar 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16084041 | Sep 2018 | US |
Child | 17457497 | US |