The present invention relates to a device for applying a high voltage using a pulse voltage, and a method of applying the high voltage, for use as a plasma generation power source that is used for the generation of ozone, etc.
A plasma generation power source device that is used for the generation of ozone, etc. is known. As this type of power source device, Patent Document 1 or Patent Document 2 is known. On the other hand, with regard to a device for applying a high voltage, the present applicant filed an application as shown in Patent Document 3 on 28 Dec. 2006.
The arrangements shown in Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2 use, in order to apply a high voltage to a capacitive load, a transformer to which is supplied an alternating voltage corresponding to a sine wave so to speak, and are constructed such that, with respect to the capacitive load connected to the secondary side of said transformer, an inductance is connected to said capacitive load, an alternating voltage having a frequency corresponding to the resonant frequency of said capacitive load and said inductance being supplied to the transformer.
On the other hand, in Patent Document 3, under an arrangement in which a capacitive load is connected via a pulse transformer, a so to speak triangular-shaped waveform high voltage having a steep leading edge and gradual trailing edge is generated, and a high voltage is applied using an alternating pulse wave voltage having a predetermined repetition period.
In addition, with regard to a device that applies a high voltage to said capacitive load, a method in which, when for example removing nitrogen oxides (NOx) or sulfur oxides (SOx) in combustion exhaust gas, low temperature plasma such as a streamer discharge or a glow discharge is used has been considered, and it is used as means for removing nitrogen oxides or sulfur oxides in this case.
In the arrangement disclosed in Patent Document 3, a switching element is used as a power source device so as to a apply triangular wave voltage having a steep leading edge via a pulse transformer. However, there is a limit in circuit design for making the leading edge steep, and the rise time T (rise) (time required for leading edge) of a waveform includes a delay due to circuit design, as described in
T(rise)=T(r·delay)+5τ(rise)
It is an object of the present invention to generate a higher voltage and apply any pulse repetition frequency to a capacitive load under an arrangement in which an alternating voltage having a predetermined period pulse component is applied, disclosed in Patent Document 3 above, irrespective of a so-called resonance phenomenon disclosed in Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2 above.
In the drawing, reference numeral 1 is a capacitive load that is a dielectric barrier discharge reactor (DBD Load), in which gas is excited by discharge to thus generate a plasma, 2 is a DC voltage supply circuit having a rectifying circuit and a smoothing circuit, 3 is a switching circuit that forms an inverter using a plurality of switching elements SWi, and 4 is a pulse transformer.
A switching element SWi preferably employs a MOS-FET, but a semiconductor switching element such as an IGBT or a transistor may be used.
Furthermore, 5 is a current detector, 6 is an amplifier circuit that gives a proportional voltage component that is proportional to a detected DC current component and an integrated voltage component that is formed by integrating said DC current component with a predetermined time constant, and 7 is an OR circuit that extracts the larger component between the proportional voltage component and the integrated voltage component.
Moreover, 8 is an oscillator circuit that oscillates so as to produce rectangular pulses having a duty ratio of for example 50%, but is controlled with a set period so as to output rectangular pulses having a duty ratio of 50% or less, for example 25% rectangular pulses, in response to the level of the output of the OR circuit 7, and is set so as to output rectangular pulses having a duty ratio of 0% (that is, oscillation stopped) when the output of the OR circuit 7 exceeds a limit.
Further, 9 is a short pulse generation circuit that generates rectangular pulses having a predetermined duty ratio of for example 10% with the leading edge point of the output from the oscillator circuit 8 as a reference. Furthermore, 10 is a gate drive circuit that receives an output from the short pulse generation circuit 9 and generates a gate control signal for the switching element SWi.
In the switching circuit 3, in principle, when the switching elements SW1 and SW4 are turned ON, current flowing through the pulse transformer 4 from the top to the bottom in the drawing is supplied, whereas when the switching elements SW2 and SW3 are turned ON, current flowing through the pulse transformer 4 from the bottom to the top in the drawing is supplied. That is, a positive-going triangular wave and negative-going triangular wave having a steep leading edge and a relatively gradual trailing edge are applied to the capacitive load 1 so as to correspond to the oscillation frequency of the oscillator circuit 8.
In other words, since the duty ratio of the rectangular pulses from the short pulse generation circuit 9 is a value of 50% or less, the above-mentioned triangular wave having a steep leading edge and a relatively gradual trailing edge is applied.
The voltage on the secondary side of the pulse transformer 4 shown in
(i) a pulse wave component corresponding to the steep leading edge and
(ii) a decaying wave component corresponding to the gradual trailing edge,
said alternating voltage being applied to the capacitive load 1.
In this process, the relationship between a secondary side leakage inductance L1 of the pulse transformer 4 and a pulse width τ0 of the pulse wave component in the present invention is set so as to be a value that satisfies
L1=(τ0/π)2×(1/C1) (1)
wherein the capacitance of the capacitive load 1 is C1.
That is, by use of the capacitance C1 of the capacitive load 1, the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer 4 is selected by the pulse width τ0 or the pulse width τ0 is determined by the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer 4, irrespective of the pulse repetition period.
In the present invention, an alternating voltage having a pulse repetition period with a pulse width of τ0, obtained as a triangular wave voltage having a steep leading edge, is generated, the maximum power efficiency and output voltage of the alternating voltage enable a high voltage to be applied to a capacitive load at any repetition period, and as a result it becomes possible to remove for example nitrogen oxides or sulfur oxides in exhaust gas with a low power input. Furthermore, it becomes possible to make a transformer that supplies a high voltage to a capacitive load small in size, light in weight, and low in cost.
A mode for carrying out the present invention is explained below by reference to the attached drawings.
The device for applying a high voltage of the present invention has an arrangement as shown in
[1], [2]: An oscillator circuit 8 oscillates so as to produce two trains of rectangular pulses having displaced phases. There is actually a predetermined ‘simultaneous OFF period’ between ‘oscillator circuit output signal 1’ and ‘oscillator circuit output signal 2’, but in the present specification such a case is also called a rectangular pulse having a duty ratio of 50% for simplicity.
[3], [4]: A short pulse generation circuit 9 generates short pulses that rise so as to correspond to the timing of the leading edge of each of the ‘oscillator circuit output signal 1’ and the ‘oscillator circuit output signal 2’ illustrated. That is, it generates ‘short pulse generation circuit output signal 1’ and ‘short pulse generation circuit output signal 2’.
[5], [6], [7], [8]: Gate signals applied to switching elements SW1 to SW4 are as illustrated based on the ‘short pulse generation circuit output signal 1’ and the ‘short pulse generation circuit output signal 2’.
[9]: Positive-going and negative-going triangular waves having steep leading edges and gradual trailing edges are applied to a capacitive load via a pulse transformer 4.
The timing at which the switching elements SW1 and SW4 are turned ON is the point of time when the illustrated (a) starts, and the timing at which they are turned OFF is the point of time when the illustrated (b) ends, a rise time T(rise) (period of the illustrated (a)) of the waveform shown in
T(rise)=T(r·delay)+5τ(rise)
for example.
Furthermore, a peak voltage holding time T(peak) (period of the illustrated (b)) is
T(peak)=T(on)−T(rise).
Furthermore, when the timing at which the switching elements SW1 and SW4 are turned OFF is defined as the point of time when the illustrated (c) starts, the trailing edge time T(fall) (period of the illustrated (c)) of waveform shown in
T(fall)=T(f·delay)+5τ(fall)
A DC current component that is detected by a current detector 5 and is supplied to the amplifier circuit 6 is inputted into the amplifier 6-11 via the proportional circuit section 6-21 and is outputted as a proportional voltage component. The DC current component thus detected is inputted into the amplifier 6-10 via the integrator circuit section 6-20 and is outputted as an integrated voltage component.
The two voltage components are inputted into the OR circuit 7 formed from the diodes 7-10 and 7-11 and the voltage divider 7-2, and as is well known the component that has the larger value is selected, divided, and outputted. This output thus divided is supplied to the oscillator circuit 8 shown in
As described above, when the high voltage having the steep leading edge is applied to the capacitive load 1, a large inrush current flows into the capacitive load 1. The DC current component outputted from the current detector 5 shown in
On the other hand, if a short circuit is generated in the capacitive load 1, a short circuit current accompanying the short circuit is sufficiently large and sustained timewise. From this, in the case of the DC current component that responds to the short circuit current detected by the current detector 5, the output from the voltage divider 7-2 of the OR circuit 7 is a voltage that is sustained over a predetermined level.
The arrangement of the oscillator circuit 8 (shown in
As described above, in the case of inrush current flowing into the capacitive load 1, as shown by the ‘inrush current region’ on the left-hand side in
From the above, in the case of the arrangement shown in
As described above, since the short pulse generation circuit 9 generates short pulses having a predetermined duty ratio based on the output from the oscillator circuit 8, even if the duty ratio of the oscillator circuit 8 changes from 50% to 25% as described above, there is no change in the duty ratio of the pulse wave supplied to the gate drive circuit 10 illustrated. However, when a short circuit is generated, the oscillator circuit 8 stops oscillation, the short pulse generation circuit 9 also stops generating short pulses, and as a result, ON/OFF operation of the switching elements SW1 to SW4 in the switching circuit 3 stops.
In the present invention, the value for a secondary side leakage inductance L1 of the pulse transformer 4 is obtained from
L1=(τ0/π)2×(1/C1)
wherein the capacitance of the capacitive load 1 is C1 and the pulse width of the pulse wave component is τ0.
That is, the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer 4 is selected for the pulse width τ0 by the capacitance C1 of the capacitive load 1 irrespective of the pulse repetition period.
The ‘secondary side leakage inductance L1 of the pulse transformer 4’ referred to in the present application means an ‘equivalent inductance’ including lead wires on the secondary side of the pulse transformer 4 and inductive elements (not illustrated) additionally inserted into the secondary side.
Furthermore, the short pulse generation circuit 9 is adjusted so that the pulse width τ0 of the pulse wave component satisfies
τ0=π√{square root over ( )}L1√{square root over ( )}C1
where the capacitance of the capacitive load 1 is C1 and the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer 4 is L1.
Moreover, as shown later in
The curve in
“So as to become a value that corresponds” referred to in the expression ‘the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer being given a value such that half a cycle of oscillating voltage generated by the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer and the capacitance of the capacitive load is a value corresponding to the pulse width of the ON period when the switching element is turned ON/OFF’ of Claim 1 of the present application means that the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer is selected so as to be within a range of point [1] to point [4] shown in
As hereinbefore explained, in the present invention, the design is such that an oscillating wave generated by the secondary side leakage inductance of the pulse transformer and the capacitance of the capacitive load does not resonate with the repetition period of the whole triangular wave-shaped waveform shown as ‘[9] DBD load output’ shown in
In the case of the present invention, even when the repetition period of the positive peak and the negative peak applied to the capacitive load 1 is changed, it is unnecessary to change the above-mentioned condition given by L1=(τ0/π)2×(1/C1). That is, even if the pulse repetition period is freely changed, a voltage with a high peak value is applied.
This shows that the arrangement in which the duty ratio is changed according to the size of the DC current component, which is explained by reference to
Needless to say, in those shown by Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2, the period of the resonant frequency occurring due to the capacitance and the inductance occurring in the circuits in Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2 above is made equivalent, 1 to 1, to the repetition period of the positive peak and the negative peak applied to the capacitive load 1.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-265941 | Nov 2009 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2010/070906 | 11/24/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/12/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/065370 | 6/3/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2001-035693 | Feb 2001 | JP |
2005-063760 | Mar 2005 | JP |
2005-340185 | Dec 2005 | JP |
2008-167584 | Jul 2008 | JP |
Entry |
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Kim et al., “A Novel SLLC Series Resonant Converter for The Boost DC/DC Converter”, thesis published Feb. 2007, pp. 56-64. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120223596 A1 | Sep 2012 | US |