The present invention generally relates to electrical components, and more particularly relates to the packaging of electrical components in power converters.
In recent years, advances in technology, as well as ever-evolving tastes in style, have led to substantial changes in the design of automobiles. One of the changes involves the complexity of the electrical systems within automobiles, particularly alternative fuel vehicles, such as hybrid, electric, and fuel cell vehicles. Such alternative fuel vehicles typically use one or more electric motors, perhaps in combination with another actuator, to drive the wheels. Additionally, such automobiles may also include other motors, as well as other high voltage components, to operate the other various systems within the automobile, such as the air conditioner.
Such vehicles, particularly fuel cell vehicles, often use two separate voltage sources, such as a battery and a fuel cell, to power the electric motors that drive the wheels. Power converters, such as direct current-to-direct current (DC/DC) converters, are typically used to manage and transfer the power from the two voltage sources. Due to the fact that alternative fuel automobiles typically include only direct current (DC) power supplies, direct current-to-alternating current (DC/AC) inverters (or power inverters) are also provided to convert the DC power to alternating current (AC) power, which is generally required by the motors.
As the power demands on the electrical systems in alternative fuel vehicles continue to increase, there is an ever increasing need to maximize the electrical efficiency of such systems. Additionally, there is a constant desire to reduce the size of the components within the electrical systems in order to minimize the overall cost and weight of the vehicles.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide an inductor assembly with improved electrical performance and reduced size and manufacturing costs. Furthermore, other desirable features and characteristics of the present invention will become apparent from the subsequent detailed description and the appended claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the foregoing technical field and background.
A vehicular power converter is provided. The vehicular power converter includes a plurality of switches and first and second inductive components. The first and second inductive components have substantially adjacent portions and are coupled to the plurality of switches such that when current flows from the plurality of switches and through the first and second inductive components, flux generated by the current flowing through the adjacent portions of the first and second inductive components and located between the adjacent portions is oriented in substantially opposite directions.
An automotive power converter is provided. The automotive power converter includes a plurality of pairs of switches, a first inductor including a first conductive winding coupled to the plurality of pairs of switches, and a second inductor including a second conductive winding coupled to the plurality of pair of switches and the first conductive winding. The first conductive winding has first and second portions, and the second conductive winding has first and second portions. The first and second inductors are configured such that the first portions of the first and second conductive windings are between the second portions of the first and second conductive windings and when current flows through the plurality of pairs of switches and the first and second inductors, flux generated by the current flowing through the first portion of the first conductive winding and located between the first portions of the first and second conductive windings is oriented in a first direction and flux generated by the current flowing through the first portion of the second conductive winding and located between the first portions of the first and second conductive windings is oriented in a second direction. The second direction is substantially opposite the first direction.
An automotive drive system is provided. The automotive drive system includes an electric motor, a power converter coupled to the electric motor and configured to be coupled to a first voltage source and a second voltage source, and a microprocessor in operable communication with the power converter. The power converter includes a plurality of switches and first and second inductive components. The microprocessor is configured to activate the plurality of switches to cause current to flow through the first and second inductive components. The first and second inductive components are configured such that the first portion of the first inductive component is between the second portion of the first inductive component and the second inductive component and when current flows from the plurality of switches and through the first and second inductive components, flux generated by the current flowing through the first portion of the first inductive component and located between the first portion of the first inductive component and the second inductive component is oriented in a first direction and flux generated by the current flowing through the second inductive component and located between the first portion of the first inductive component and the second inductive component is oriented in a second direction. The second direction is substantially opposite the first direction.
The present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the following drawing figures, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and
The following detailed description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the invention or the application and uses of the invention. Furthermore, there is no intention to be bound by any expressed or implied theory presented in the preceding technical field, background, brief summary or the following detailed description. Additionally, although the schematic diagrams shown herein depict example arrangements of elements, additional intervening elements, devices, features, or components may be present in an actual embodiment. It should also be understood that
The automobile 10 may be any one of a number of different types of automobiles, such as, for example, a sedan, a wagon, a truck, or a sport utility vehicle (SUV), and may be two-wheel drive (2WD) (i.e., rear-wheel drive or front-wheel drive), four-wheel drive (4WD) or all-wheel drive (AWD). The automobile 10 may also incorporate any one of, or combination of, a number of different types of engines, such as, for example, a gasoline or diesel fueled combustion engine, a “flex fuel vehicle” (FFV) engine (i.e., using a mixture of gasoline and alcohol), a gaseous compound (e.g., hydrogen and natural gas) fueled engine, a combustion/electric motor hybrid engine, and an electric motor.
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
As shown, the battery 22 and the FCPM 24 are in operable communication and/or electrically connected to the electronic control system 18 and the DC/DC converter system 26. Although not illustrated, the FCPM 24, in one embodiment, includes, amongst other components, a fuel cell having an anode, a cathode, an electrolyte, and a catalyst. As is commonly understood, the anode, or negative electrode, conducts electrons that are freed from, for example, hydrogen molecules so that they can be used in an external circuit. The cathode, or positive electrode (i.e., the positive post of the fuel cell), conducts the electrons back from the external circuit to the catalyst, where they can recombine with the hydrogen ions and oxygen to form water. The electrolyte, or proton exchange membrane, conducts only positively charged ions while blocking electrons. The catalyst facilitates the reaction of oxygen and hydrogen.
Although not shown, the DC/DC converter system 26 may also include a BDC controller in operable communication with the BDC converter 32. The BDC controller may be implemented within the electronic control system 18 (
The switch network comprises three pairs of series switches with antiparallel diodes (i.e., antiparallel to each switch) corresponding to each of the phases. Each of the pairs of series switches comprises a first switch, or transistor, (i.e., a “high” switch) 64, 66, and 68 having a first terminal coupled to a positive electrode of the voltage source 62 and a second switch (i.e., a “low” switch) 70, 72, and 74 having a second terminal coupled to a negative electrode of the voltage source 62 and having a first terminal coupled to a second terminal of the respective first switch 64, 66, and 68.
In one embodiment, the inverter 28 is a “z-source” inverter, as is commonly understood, and includes an impedance source 76 coupled between the voltage source 62 and the pairs of switches, which includes an inductive component (or at least one inductor) and a capacitive component (or at least one capacitor). In the depicted embodiment, the inductive component includes a split inductor having a first inductive portion 78 and a second inductive portion 80, each of which has first and second sides. The first inductive portion 78 is connected between the first switches 64, 66, and 68 and the positive electrode of the voltage source 62. The second inductive portion 80 is connected between the second switches 70, 72, and 74 and the negative terminal of the voltage source 62.
The capacitive component includes a first capacitor 82 and a second capacitor 84 connected in an “X” configuration to the first and second inductive portions 76 and 78. That is, the first capacitor 82 has a first terminal connected to the first side of the first inductive portion 78 and a second terminal connected to the second side of the second inductive portion 80. The second capacitor 84 has a first terminal connected to the second side of the first inductive portion 78 and a second terminal connected to the first side of the second inductive portion 80. In the depicted embodiment, the inverter 28 also includes an additional switch 86, which may be similar to the switches 64-74 and used to allow a higher voltage to be maintained on the inverter side of the DC bus.
Although not shown, the DC/AC inverter 28 may also include an inverter control module, which may be implemented within the electronic control system 18 (
The BDC 32 and the inverter 28 may also include a plurality of power module devices, each including a semiconductor substrate with an integrated circuit formed thereon, amongst which the switches 40-46 and 64-74 are distributed, as is commonly understood.
Referring again to
The electronic control system 18 is in operable communication with the motor 20, the battery 22, the FCPM 24, the DC/DC converter system 26, and the inverter 28. Although not shown in detail, the electronic control system 18 includes various sensors and automotive control modules, or electronic control units (ECUs), such as the BDC controller, the inverter control module, and a vehicle controller, and at least one processor and/or a memory which includes instructions stored thereon (or in another computer-readable medium) for carrying out the processes and methods as described below.
As shown in
The first and second conductive windings 98 and 106 are positioned within the winding openings 112 and “wrapped” around the central portions 114 of the cores 96 and 104, respectively. As such, referring specifically to
As shown in
As should be apparent from
During operation, referring again to
The electronic control system 18 (or the BDC controller and/or the inverter control module) control the DC/DC converter system 26 and the DC/AC inverter 28. The DC/DC converter system 26 transfers power between the FCPM 24 and the battery 22. In one embodiment, the switching inductor 48 is primarily responsible for the power conversion process, as the switching inductor 48 stores energy in a first part of the operating cycle and releases it in a second part of the operating cycle. Thus, the switching inductor 48 ensures that the energy transfer takes place in the desired direction, regardless of the voltaic relationship between the FCPM 24 and the battery 22, and a constant average current, equal to the desired average current, is impressed through the switching inductor 48.
Referring again to
During various periods of operation, current flows through the switching inductor 48 within the BDC 32, as well as the first and second inductive portions 78 and 80 within the DC/AC inverter 28. When utilized as the switching inductor 48 within the BDC 32 and/or the inductive portions 78 and 80 within the DC/AC inverter 28, current flows through the first and second inductors 92 and 94 as shown in
Still referring to
As a result, flux (indicated with flux arrows 126) located between the inner portions 116 and 120 of the windings 98 and 106 and generated by the current flowing through the respective inner portions 116 and 120 of the windings 98 and 106 is oriented in opposing, or substantially opposite, directions. Specifically, in the embodiment shown in
Because current flows through the inner portions 116 and 120 and the outer portions 118 and 122 in opposite directions, substantially all flux generated within the central portions 114 of the cores 96 and 104 is oriented in the same direction. That is, flux generated by the current flowing through both the inner portion 116 and the outer portion 118 of the first conductive winding 98 within the central portion 114 of the first core 96 is oriented upwards (i.e., in the second direction). Flux generated by the current flowing through both the inner portion 120 and the outer portion 122 of the second conductive winding 106 within the central portion 114 of the second core 104 is oriented downwards (i.e., in the first direction).
As shown in
One advantage of the inductor assembly described above is that because current flows through the inner portions of both of the conductive windings in the same direction, the flux generated from each is oriented in opposite directions. As a result, the flux between the first and second inductors is at least partially cancelled, thereby reducing core and copper losses. Thus, smaller components may be used for the inductors, which reduces the size and the costs of the inductor assembly, the power converter, and the vehicle as a whole.
Other embodiments may be utilized in different types of vehicles, such as aircraft and watercraft, or in different electrical systems altogether, as it may be implemented in any situation in which multiple inductors, or a split inductor, may be used. Additionally, the inductor assembly may be used with inductors connected in different electrical configurations.
While at least one exemplary embodiment has been presented in the foregoing detailed description, it should be appreciated that a vast number of variations exist. It should also be appreciated that the exemplary embodiment or exemplary embodiments are only examples and are not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the foregoing detailed description will provide those skilled in the art with a convenient road map for implementing the exemplary embodiment or exemplary embodiments. It should be understood that various changes can be made in the function and arrangement of elements without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims and the legal equivalents thereof.
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