Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
The present invention relates in general to DC-DC converters in electric drive systems for electrified vehicles, and more specifically to an interleaved converter for providing reduced current ripple and increased current capability over an increased range of voltage gain.
Electric vehicles, such as hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), and battery electric vehicles (BEVs), use inverter-driven electric machines to provide traction torque. A typical electric drive system may include a DC power source (such as a battery pack or a fuel cell) coupled by contactor switches to a DC-DC converter (also known as a variable voltage converter, or VVC) to regulate a main bus voltage across a main DC linking capacitor. A 3-phase motor inverter is connected between the main buses and a traction motor in order to convert the DC bus power to an AC voltage that is coupled to the windings of the motor to propel the vehicle. During deceleration of the vehicle, the motor can be driven by the vehicle wheels and used to deliver electrical power to charge the battery during regenerative braking of the vehicle, wherein the DC-DC converter works in the opposite direction to convert the generated power to a voltage appropriate for charging the battery pack. In some vehicles, another 3-phase inverter may also be present to connect the DC bus to a generator which is driven by an internal combustion engine to charge the battery.
Using the appropriate modulation of the power switches, a VVC can operate in boost mode (converting to a higher voltage), buck mode (converting to a lower voltage), or pass-through mode (no change in voltage). For use in a hybrid electric vehicle driver system, the VVC is also configured to selectably provide bi-directional power flow.
The typical VVC includes at least one phase leg with upper and lower transistor switching devices (e.g., insulated gate bipolar transistors, IGBTs) connected in series across the DC link capacitor. An intermediate junction between the switching devices is connected to the source battery via an inductor. An electronic controller provides switching signals (i.e., gate signals) to turn the switching devices on and off according to a modulation scheme that provides the desired VVC mode. Pulse width modulation is typically used to control the stepping up of a voltage by the VVC, wherein a duty cycle of the switching signals can be varied in order to regulate the VVC voltage to a desired magnitude.
High-power/high-current DC-DC converters typically employ interleaved multiphase inputs in the converter (i.e., two or more parallel phase legs) in order to obtain a current rating higher than the current capacity of just one phase leg. In addition, an interleaved DC-DC converter greatly reduces battery current ripple. The inductors connecting each phase leg of an interleaved DC-DC converters to the battery pack can be independent inductors or they can be inductively coupled.
Even with the multiphase architecture, there continue to be voltage gain limitations. The gain is determined by a duty cycle D defined as Ton/Ts, where Ton is the conduction duration of the lower switching device and Ts is the switching period. Based on the duty cycle, the voltage gain G is determined by the formula
The converter efficiency dramatically decreases with increasing the duty cycle D when voltage gain G is larger than two. Consequently, the voltage gain for conventional DC-DC converters has typically been limited to less than three. Higher voltage gains would be desirable to reduce motor inverter loss over a wide speed range operation. In addition, operating the DC-DC converter at a higher duty cycle for most of the time results in higher power loss and high voltage stress within the phase leg switching devices. Therefore, an improved DC-DC converter is needed that can provide higher voltage gain at reduced duty cycles.
Another potential drawback of conventional interleaved converters is that high current ripple in the inductors creates a larger power loss when the duty cycle D is high. Large inductors have been necessary to limit current ripple, but they are lossy, bulky, and heavy which is undesirable for high power HEV applications.
In one aspect of the invention, a variable voltage converter in an electric drive system comprises parallel switching legs with respective upper and lower switching devices connected in series between a positive node and a negative node and each having a respective intermediate junction coupled to a battery by a respective inductance. Upper and lower linking capacitors are connected in series between a positive bus and a negative bus of the drive system. A configurable coupler has a first switching device selectably coupling the positive node to the positive bus, a second switching device selectably coupling the positive node to a capacitor junction between the linking capacitors, a third switching device selectably coupling the negative node to the capacitor junction, and a fourth switching device selectably coupling the negative node with the negative bus. A controller is configured to drive the upper and lower switching devices according to PWM gate signals having a duty cycle adapted to provide a target voltage between the buses, and configured to actuate the first through fourth switching devices to selectably steer currents from the switching legs to charge the linking capacitors in series to provide a first voltage gain and to charge the linking capacitors individually to provide a second voltage gain larger than the first voltage gain.
Referring to
VVC 10 can work in boost mode or in buck mode with power flow in either direction. Switching devices Sp1, Sn1, Sp2, and Sn2 in the phase legs work with inductors 16 and 17 (having inductances L1 and L2) in an interleaved way, whereby each inductor and the respective phase leg support half of the battery current (in boost mode). The phase leg switching signals for Sp1 and Sn1 (which are inverted from each other) have a 180° phase shift compared with the phase leg switching signals for Sp2 and Sn2, which achieves the interleaved operation to significantly reduce battery current ripple. Thus, currents iL1 and il2 flowing through inductors 16 and 17 have the same magnitude but are have a 180° phase shift.
In
Each of the switching devices in VVC 10 are preferably comprised of an insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT). Each IGBT has a respective control (e.g., base) terminal coupled to a controller (not shown) which controls the switches according to various operating modes of the converter. The controller may be comprised of a motor-generator control unit (MGCU) of a type that is commercially available and as described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,106,162, issued Aug. 11, 2015, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
In order to obtain a desired voltage gain from VVC 10, a well-known pulse width modulation (PWM) method is typically used to generate gate signals for the IGBT switching devices. The voltage gain G (e.g., from battery voltage Vb to the DC-link voltage Vdc) is defined as
where the duty cycle D is the percentage of ON-time of the lower switching device of the phase legs. As shown in
As shown by a first preferred embodiment of the invention illustrated in
A controller/driver 24 provides PWM switching signals to the phase leg switching devices and steering signals to actuate switching devices in coupler 23. In the invention, the phase legs are coupled between a positive node 25 and a negative node 26. Configurable coupler 23 is a switching array having a first switching device 27 (Sp4) selectably coupling positive node 25 to positive bus 14, a second switching device 28 (Sp3) selectably coupling positive node 25 to a capacitor junction between linking capacitors 21 and 22, a third switching device 29 (Sn3) selectably coupling negative node 26 to the capacitor junction, and a fourth switching device 30 (Sn4) selectably coupling negative node 26 with negative bus 15.
The layout of coupler 23 and capacitors 21 and 22 have the flexibility to selectably steer currents from the phase legs to charge the capacitors either separately or together. Therefore, controller 24 can operate converter 20 according to several different modulation modes in order to provide an expanded range of available voltage gains while consistently achieving low power losses.
Current flow according to Mode I-A at a time t1 (
In Mode II (i.e., when the target voltage gain is between 2·Vb and 4·Vb), the link capacitors are only charged separately.
Sp3=
where X is related to the carrier waveform as shown in
In Mode III (i.e., when the target voltage gain is greater than 4·Vb), the link capacitors are charged separately as in Mode II. In Mode III, however, there are times when switching devices Sp3, Sn3, Sp4, and Sn4 are all OFF and no charging current is steered to the capacitors. Furthermore, Mode III is preferably used only with duty cycle D greater than or equal to 0.5.
Current flow according to Mode III at a time t1 (
Simulated results for Mode III are shown in
Although the DC-DC converter illustrated above has two phase legs, the invention is not so limited. The invention is easily extended to converters with three or more interleaved phase legs, which would result in even higher current, lower ripple, and higher voltage gains.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7295448 | Zhu | Nov 2007 | B2 |
7518886 | Lai et al. | Apr 2009 | B1 |
8213188 | Tada et al. | Jul 2012 | B2 |
9106162 | Isayeva et al. | Aug 2015 | B2 |
9413271 | Vogel | Aug 2016 | B2 |
20190267888 | Ge | Aug 2019 | A1 |
20190366850 | Ge | Dec 2019 | A1 |
20190379296 | Ge | Dec 2019 | A1 |
20200028434 | Ge | Jan 2020 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
202840953 | Mar 2013 | CN |
2819290 | Dec 2014 | EP |
Entry |
---|
Mohd Salauddin Parvez et al., An Interleaved Bi-Directional DC-DC Converter for Fuel-Cell fed Electric Vehicle Application, International Journal of Scientific Engineering and Technology Research, ISSN 2319-8885, vol. 04 Issue 21, Jul. 2015, pp. 3960-3966. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20190181766 A1 | Jun 2019 | US |