The present invention relates to an electric power unit for induction heating, more particularly, to an electric power unit for induction heating for supplying a high frequency alternate pulse current to an induction coil (also called a work coil) of an induction heating device.
Conventionally, when flowing an alternate pulse current through an inductance load such as an induction coil for an induction heating device, it is necessary to apply a high voltage from the power supply to change the current, due to the effect of magnetic (snubber) energy stored at the inductance load.
In order to flow the alternate pulse current through the induction coil by a conventional voltage-type inverter comprising semiconductor switches, the inverter must generate voltage corresponding to changes in the electric current. A difference in phase is brought about between the current and the voltage of the inverter, and the power supply becomes a so-called power supply with a low power factor.
It is possible to improve the power factor by connecting a resonance capacitor, which is often used in high frequency circuits, to the induction coil in series or in parallel, and it is, thereby, possible to reduce the inverter capacity. However, it was only possible for the inverter, for the induction heating device, using a fixed resonance capacitor to improve the power factor thereof only at a frequency specified by L and C.
By using the Magnetic Energy Recovery Switches (hereinafter, “MERSes”, see Patent Literature 1), which store magnetic energy of the circuit and supply the energy to the load, and by turning ON/OFF them, the voltage necessary for changing the current drastically can be generated automatically by the current coming into a magnetic energy storage capacitor, thereby making it unnecessary for the power supply to provide the voltage.
As shown in
In case that alternate pulse current is flown through an inductive load having mainly inductance component and a little resistance, it was necessary, conventionally, to apply a high voltage, from the power supply, corresponding to changes in the electric current, by the effect of magnetic energy stored at the inductive load. However in the case shown in
The alternate pulse current generating device shown in
The object of the present invention, therefore, is to provide an electric power unit for induction heating which utilizes the merits of MERS, does not need an AC power supply with a large current capacity, and yet has a simple structure comprising a small number of elements and can generate alternate pulse current.
The present invention relates to an electric power unit for induction heating for providing high frequency alternate pulse current to an induction coil for induction heating of an object to be heated. The object of the present invention can be achieved by an electric power unit for induction heating comprising a DC power supply 5, a smoothing coil 4 for smoothing DC power from the DC power supply, a bridge circuit 1 having four reverse-conductive type semiconductor switches connected in a bridge structure comprising an anti-parallel circuit with a self arc-extinguishing type element and a diode, a capacitor 2 connected between the DC terminals of the bridge circuit 1, wherein magnetic energy recovered from the circuit is stored in the capacitor when the switches of the bridge circuit are turned OFF, and control unit 6 for controlling ON/OFF of the reverse-conductive semiconductor switches,
wherein the control unit 6 controls, in the cycle of the alternate pulse current to be provided to the induction coil 3 so as to simultaneously turn ON/OFF a pair of the reverse-conductive type semiconductor switches located diagonally and yet to prevent the two pairs from being turned ON simultaneously, and
wherein the control unit 6 controls the operation so that the frequency of the generated alternate pulse current is lower than the resonance frequency determined by the inductance of the induction coil 3 and the capacitance of the capacitor 2 to thereby maintain the resonance conditions without depending on the pulse frequency, to reuse the magnetic energy of the circuit by recovering such energy, and to continuously provide the alternate pulse current to the induction coil 3 by charging the capacitor 2 from the DC power supply 5 through the smoothing coil 4.
Moreover the object of the present invention can be achieved by an electric power unit for induction heating wherein a DC power which is acquired by rectifying an AC through a rectifying bridge diode is provided to a smoothing coil 4 from a commercial AC power supply used in place of the DC power supply 5.
An explanation of the operation of the electric power unit for induction heating will be given using
Next, FIG. 3(2) shows that when the capacitor is discharged and the voltage thereof becomes zero, the diodes of SW2 and SW4 are turned ON automatically, and the current continues to flow through all switches (a parallel-conductive condition). The current which flows to the load damps because of the resistance R of the load.
Next, as shown in FIG. 3(3), when all the switches are turned OFF, the current of the load is naturally charged in the capacitor through the diodes, and the voltage of the capacitor rises until the current stops flowing. When the current stops flowing, recovered magnetic energy will have been moved to the storage capacitor. Herein the condition of the electric power unit returns to the condition shown in FIG. 3(1). In this instance the voltage polarity of the capacitor is constant regardless of the direction of the current.
As the capacitance of the capacitor is small and the resonance frequency with the inductance L of the load is higher than the pulse frequency, semiconductor switches are in the condition of the zero voltage switching and zero current switching. That is, the electric power unit is structured in such a manner that the magnetic energy of the inductive load is recovered using the magnetic energy recovery switches and bipolar current pulse is alternately generated to the inductive load.
The alternate pulse current damps because the energy is consumed by the resistance R included in the induction coil of the inductive load or secondary resistance magnetically induced. The energy is input from a constant-current source 5. The constant-current source 5 is connected to the storage capacitor 2, and at both ends of the capacitor 2 capacitor voltage appears during a half cycle of the resonance of L and C when the direction of the current is changed and after the gates are stopped (after all the switches are turned OFF), and there is no coil current flowing; then the electric power which is equivalent to (the electric current)×(the capacitor voltage) is input from the constant-current source 5. (
A constant-current source 5 can be realized by a voltage source having a smoothing coil 4 with a large inductance. In this case the source current is made a DC with a few ripples owing to the smoothing coil 4 and becomes smaller than the oscillating pulse load current. It is a characteristic of the present invention that the constant-current source 5 may comprise a high voltage and a small current volume, and it is the merit of the present invention that the feeder from the constant-current source 5 can be thin.
A simulation circuit is shown in
energy storage capacitor 2: C=0.47 μF
inductive load coil 3: L=1 mH
equivalent resistance: R=5Ω
current source inductance 4 (smoothing coil): L=40 mH
DC power supply: A voltage obtained by rectifying AC 100V by a bridge diode 7 The explanation of the circuit operation and rough estimates of the input power and output are as follows:
Also the ratio of equivalent resistance R and ωL of the inductive load 3 is Q of this LC resonance circuit,
Q=ωL/R
When peak voltage of the capacitor is defined as Vc, the maximum current of the induction coil Imax is as follows:
Imax=Vc/Z
when the surge impedance Z of LC circuit is set to:
Z=√(L/C)
The electric power consumed when the current Imax flows through the equivalent resistance R is defined as Wr. Including such a case that the current is clamped by the diode and becomes a DC, and further damps by the resistance, the value of Wr is roughly approximated to the following equation:
Wr=Imax*Imax*R/2
Until this figure balances with Pin, the voltage and the current frequencies grow.
Pin=0.65*Imax*Z*Iin=Imax*Imax*R/2
where the current ratio of Imax and Iin is derived from the above equation:
Imax/Iin=2*0.65*Z/R=1.3*Z/R
Imax/Iin≈Z/R
This value is almost equal to Q of the circuit, and is an analogically understandable result. That is, it is considered that the electric current Q times larger than the constant-current input Iin flows through the load.
In this simulation:
L=1 mH
C=0.47 μF
R=5Ω
Then,
Z=√(L/C)=46.12
and when Iin is set to:
Iin=0.5 A
Imax/Iin≈Z/R=9.2
Imax=9.2*Iin=4.6 A
Vc=Imax*Z=212V
wherein the acquired values in the above calculations and the simulation results (
What is important in the above rough estimates is that input power Pin is proportionate to R of the load and the square of the electric current, and also proportionate to the DC source voltage. That the electric current proportionate to the source voltage flows means that if the electric current having the same phase with the voltage phase such as, for example, a half wave of the AC rectified by the rectifying bridge diode and made a DC source, is flown, it will work out as the AC input with the power factor of 1.
As shown in
The electric power unit for induction heating according to the present invention has an excellent effect that the alternate pulse current can be generated only by magnetic energy recovery switches (MERS) and yet the frequency of the alternate pulse current can be changed by controlling the gate signals to the MERS switches.
Various embodiments and changes may be made thereunto without departing from the broad spirit and scope of the invention. The above-described embodiments are intended to illustrate the present invention, not to limit the scope of the present invention. The scope of the present invention is shown by the attached claims rather than the embodiments. Various modifications made within the meaning of an equivalent of the claims of the invention and within the claims are to be regarded to be in the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-273511 | Oct 2006 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2007/069139 | 9/21/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/6/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/044512 | 4/17/2008 | WO | A |
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