The invention relates to an inverter as set forth in the preamble of claim 1.
An input converter for railbound vehicles is known from DE 198 27 872. It consists of a resonant converter with galvanic separation. Input/output voltage ratio is fixed. In loss optimized operation, the fixed input/output voltage ratio is determined by the transformation ratio of the transformer.
Due to varying ambiant conditions (solarization, temperature, . . . ) and different generator designs, inverters in photovoltaic systems must be designed for a wide input voltage range and at the same time be highly efficient over this entire range.
The invention is directed to an inverter which, in the context of a wide input voltage range as it is given in photovoltaic systems and of variable mains voltage, provides galvanic separation, with the efficiency being intended to be optimized over the entire input voltage range.
The invention enables optimum efficiency in operation of the inverters in the case of varying solarization and temperature of the photovoltaic modules or of different photovoltaic module configurations. The switching losses are minimized by the fact that the resonant converter operates independently of the input voltage at a constant operating point, this operating point being set over a wide input voltage range by the boost chopper. Provided the voltage at the resonant converter is stabilized, a boost chopper is more beneficial than a buck chopper insofar as the resonant converter achieves higher efficiency at higher stabilized input voltages.
The inverter of the invention combines advantages with respect to voltage adaptation and operation of a HF circuit without the tradeoff of adverse power and voltage ratings, high repetition rate of the adaptation stage, switching overvoltages and limited range of operation.
In an advantageous developed implementation of the converter of the invention, there is provided that the inverter is configured to be a single-phase inverter, with a power electronic half-bridge circuit, a series resonant capacitance and a high frequency transformer being provided. While the resonant converter operates at a constant operating point so that its input/output voltage ratio, which is dictated by the transformation ratio of the transformer, is fixed, the input voltage at the boost chopper may vary.
The boost chpper may advantageously be configured for permanent interval operation so that the free-wheeling diode of the boost chopper will never experience hard switching communication at turn-off. EMC transients are thus reduced and efficiency is increased as turn-on power losses are avoided.
The boost chopper need not be activated if the input voltage U0 is high enough for the voltage at the capacitor Cmains to be sufficient for mains electricity supply. As a result, it is activated only if the actual mains voltage is so high that the actual PV voltage is not sufficient to set the voltage at the Cmains.
Efficiency is significantly improved using such a method since the losses are low in operating points without boost chopper operation. This is particularly efficient if the boost chopper reactors are particularly small due to the interval mode design, thus comprising very low ohmic resistances.
Appropriately, the repetition rate of the half-bridge circuit is lower than the resonance frequency. Said resonance frequency is obtained from the leakage inductance of the transformer and the series resonant capacitance. As a result, the semiconductors are zero-current switched, both on and off.
According to another advantageous developed implementation of the invention, there is provided a synchronous activation of the boost chopper and the resonant converter. Synchronous activation has the advantage to minimize the effective current load in the capacitors (C3, C4).
A particular effect of benefit is obtained if the transformer is configured to be a planar transformer having two printed circuit boards, with the primary winding being disposed on the one printed circuit board and the secondary winding on the other printed circuit board. The advantage thereof is that the printed circuit boards are coupled via a magnetic flux, which allows the expensive plug-and-socket connectors to be eliminated altogether. A cast housing, which is manufacturable at a lower cost than a corresponding sheet metal housing, comprises projections for good integration of such a planar transformer having two overlapping printed circuit boards with regard to cooling.
The leakage inductance of the planar transformer may be beneficially increased by introducing an additional reactor core with an air gap (
One exemplary embodiment is discussed in closer detail with reference to the drawings, with further advantageous developed implementations of the invention and their advantages being described.
In the drawing:
In the FIGS., like elements bear the same reference numerals.
In accordance with the invention, a boost chopper 3 is mounted upstream of the resonant converter 2. Alternatively, a buck chopper may be mounted upstream of the resonant converter.
The boost chopper serves to adapt the voltage to voltage variations of the photovoltaic generator that may occur as a result of diverse operating conditions (solarization, temperature, . . . ), different generator designs or dynamic adaptations to different mains voltage levels.
The boost chopper consists of a series reactor L, a switching element T3 and a diode D3 that are arranged in parallel to the half-bridge circuit and to two series-mounted capacitors C3, C4. The capacity of the capacitors C3, C4 is thereby greater than the series resonant capacitance (capacitor C1).
The boost chopper operates in an input voltage range U0 of 150 to 350 volt. The voltage U1 applied downstream of the boost chopper is about 350 volt. The voltage U2 at the output of the resonant converter also is 350 volt. If the input voltage is in excess of 350 volt, the boost chopper is not clocked and the voltages U1 and U2 increase proportionally with U0.
The resonant DC/DC converter 2 is operated unidirectionally with the circuit shown in
The boost chopper 3 and the resonant converter 2 are activated synchronously in order to reduce the effective current load in the capacitors.
It is preferred that the repetition rate of the half-bridge circuit be lower than the resonance frequency, which is obtained from the leakage inductance of the transformer and the series resonant capacitance.
The transformer HFT is configured to be a planar transformer 10, as illustrated in the
In the circuit shown in
In the circuit shown in
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