The present application relates to an isolated DC-DC converter.
Galvanic isolation between circuit components and transmission of data and power across an isolation barrier is often provided for safety and/or data integrity considerations. Some isolated DC-DC converters include a driver that drives a primary winding of a transformer to transmit power to a secondary winding of the transformer across an isolation barrier. A rectifier converts the received voltage at the secondary winding of the transformer into an output DC voltage.
Isolated DC-DC converters and methods for operating the same are described herein. DC-DC converters include a driver that drives a primary winding of a transformer to transmit power to a secondary winding of the transformer across an isolation barrier. In some embodiments, a pair of symmetrical serial capacitors are provided between the driver and the primary winding of a resonant DC-DC converter with an on-chip transformer to slow down variations of a common mode voltage on the primary winding during operation. This is turn can suppress radiation emissions related to time variation rates of the common mode voltage and, and can also improve electromagnetic interference (EMI) performance of the DC-DC converter.
In some embodiments, a DC-DC converter is provided. The DC-DC converter comprises a primary winding having first and second terminals; a secondary winding separated from the primary winding by an isolation barrier; a full bridge driver; a first capacitor coupled between the full bridge driver and the first terminal of the primary winding and a second capacitor coupled between the full bridge driver and the second terminal of the primary winding.
In some embodiments, a method of operating a DC-DC converter is provided. The DC-DC converter comprises a primary winding, a secondary winding and a full bridge driver. The secondary winding is separated from the primary winding by an isolation barrier. The method comprises driving a signal from the full bridge driver through a serial current path through a first capacitor coupled to a first terminal of the primary winding, the primary winding and a second capacitor coupled to a second terminal of the primary winding.
In some embodiments, a resonant DC-DC converter is provided. The DC-DC converter comprises a transformer having a primary winding and a secondary winding integrated on a semiconductor substrate. The secondary winding is separated from the primary winding by an isolation barrier. The DC-DC converter further comprises a full bridge driver capacitively coupled to the primary winding with a serial capacitor. The resonance DC-DC converter further comprises a feedback loop coupled between an output of the DC-DC converter and an input of the full bridge driver.
Various aspects and embodiments of the application will be described with reference to the following figures. It should be appreciated that the figures are not necessarily drawn to scale. Items appearing in multiple figures are indicated by the same reference number in all the figures in which they appear.
Aspects of the present application provide isolator circuits which transfer a direct current (DC) signal from a first side of the isolated circuit across an isolation barrier to a second side of the isolated circuit. These isolator circuits represent DC-DC converters, converting a first DC signal, such as a power signal, on the first side to a second DC signal on the second side. Galvanic isolation between the first and second sides of the isolation circuit, which are also referred to herein as the primary and second sides, respectively, provides safe circuit operation and/or data integrity. According to an aspect of the present application, the isolator circuit includes a transformer bridging the isolation barrier, with the transformer having one winding on the primary side and another winding on the secondary side. The primary side includes a circuit for driving a signal to the winding of the transformer on the primary side, and includes one or more capacitors coupled electrically between the driving circuit and the transformer winding on the primary side. Placing the capacitor(s) between the driving circuit and the transformer winding on the primary side reduces undesirable current flow across the isolation barrier in at least some embodiments.
A resonant DC-DC converter is one which includes a resonating drive circuit on the primary side of the converter. In a resonant DC-DC converter, an input DC voltage is supplied to a driver circuit at the primary side to drive a primary winding of a transformer with alternating current signals (AC signals) at a particular frequency according to one or more control signals supplied to the driver circuit. The secondary winding of the transformer, on the secondary side of the converter, is electromagnetically coupled to the primary winding and thus receives the AC signals transmitted from the primary winding. A rectifier circuit at the secondary side converts the received AC signals into a DC output voltage.
The inventors have appreciated that parasitic capacitance between the primary winding and the secondary winding in a DC-DC converter may give rise to a time-varying leakage current when the relative voltage difference between the two windings changes, for example when the primary winding is driven by the driver at a high frequency. The leakage current across the isolation barrier is undesirable. When the leakage current flows across conductors inside or adjacent to the DC-DC converter, for example across different electrical ground planes in a circuit board housing the circuit components, high frequency radiation may be generated and emitted, which may cause interference with other electronic components. Such radiation may be particularly undesirable when the DC-DC converter is used in automotive or medical applications.
Aspects of the present application provide improved electromagnetic interference performance in an isolated DC-DC converter. The isolated DC-DC converter includes a transformer with a primary winding coupled to a driver circuit. Symmetrical serial coupling capacitors connect the driver circuit to the primary winding of the transformer. Such a configuration reduces radiation from leakage current across the isolation barrier, in at least some embodiments.
In the DC-DC converter 100, a DC voltage VDD and one or more control signals 12 are provided to driver 10 to drive the primary winding 31 in the primary side 30 of the transformer 40 via the coupling capacitor block 20. The primary winding 31 is electromagnetically coupled to the secondary winding 51 across an isolation barrier 42, which may be formed of a dielectric. The secondary winding 51 is coupled to a rectifier 70 to convert signals received in the secondary winding 51 into an output DC voltage VOUTPUT.
In some embodiments, driver 10 modulates the DC voltage VDD in response to control signals 12 to drive the primary winding 31 with alternating currents at a certain frequency. The driver 10 may take any suitable form, and in some embodiments is a resonating circuit. Examples are shown in
The inventors have recognized that input-to-output dipole emission may occur in a DC-DC converter if a common mode current traverses the isolation barrier of the converter. For purposes of explanation, the common mode current ICM is shown in
I
CM
=C
ISO
·d(VPRI−VSEC)/dt (1).
Here, CISO is the parasitic capacitor between the primary winding 31 and secondary winding 51 and VPRI and VSEC are the common voltage on the transformer primary side 30 and transformer secondary side 50, respectively. In some embodiments, VPRI may be represented by an average of the voltages at the two terminals P1, P2 of the primary winding 31 and VSEC may be represented by an average of the voltages at the two terminals S1, S2 of the secondary winding 51. The common mode current may generate input-to-output dipole radiation by, for example, driving a current across a gap between electrical ground planes in the device.
The inventors have appreciated that by reducing the rate of variation of VPRI during operation of the DC-DC converter, dipole emission due to common mode current ICM may be reduced, thus improving device electromagnetic interference performance. In some embodiments, coupling capacitors 20 may comprise one or more serial capacitors between the primary winding 31 and the driver 10. The serial capacitors may, and in at least some embodiments do, delay the rate of variations in the voltages at the two terminals P1, P2 of the primary winding when the driver 10 is configured to supply a series of voltage pulses at a certain frequency in response to the control signal 12. In some embodiments, soft-switching techniques such as zero voltage switching in the driver 10 may be used to reduce the variation of the voltages at the two terminals P1, P2 of the primary winding.
The primary winding 31 and secondary winding 51 may be any suitable conductor coils electromagnetically coupled to each other to transmit power across the isolation barrier 42. According to a preferred embodiment, the primary winding 31 and secondary winding 51 of the isolated DC-DC converter 100 in
According to some aspects of the present disclosure, serial capacitor CS1 capacitively couples a voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver 210 with the first terminal P1. In some embodiments, serial capacitor CS1 connects the full bridge driver 210 with the first terminal P1 of the primary winding 231 and forms a serial current path from the voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver, via the serial capacitor CS1, across the primary winding 231 and through the voltage node N2 of the full bridge driver.
In some embodiments, during operation of the DC-DC converter 200A, the switches in the full bridge driver 210 are controlled by external control signals (not shown) to open and close sequentially such that an AC current of a certain frequency flows from voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver to the first terminal P1 of the primary winding 231 via the serially coupled capacitor CS1. The AC current flowing through the primary winding 231 generates a corresponding voltage signal between the two terminals S1 and S2 of the secondary winding 251. The voltage signal is rectified in the rectifier 270 to provide a DC output voltage VOUTPUT.
In some embodiments, a resonant LC tank circuit is formed comprising serial capacitor CS1 and inductor 233 and the DC-DC converter 200A is a resonant converter. Inductor 233 may be any suitable inductor for formation of a resonant LC tank circuit and in some embodiments, inductor 233 may be the leakage inductance of the primary winding 231. Although not shown in
In the example of DC-DC converter 200B, serial capacitor CS1 capacitively couples the voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver 210 with the first terminal P1, while serial capacitor CS1 capacitively couples the voltage node N2 of the full bridge driver 210 with the second terminal P2 of the primary winding 231. In some embodiments, a serial current path is formed from the voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver 210, via serial capacitor CS1, across terminals P1 and P2 of the primary winding 231, through serial capacitor CS2 to the voltage node N2 of the full bridge driver.
In some embodiments, during operation of the DC-DC converter 200B, the switches in the full bridge driver 210 are controlled by external control signals (not shown) to open and close sequentially such that an AC current of a certain frequency flows from voltage node N1 of the full bridge driver to the first terminal P1 of the primary winding 231 via the serially coupled capacitor CS1. After flowing across the primary winding 231, the AC current exits the second terminal P2 and flows through serial capacitor CS2 to voltage node N2 of the full bridge driver. The AC current flowing through the primary winding 231 generates a corresponding voltage signal between the two terminals S1 and S2 of the secondary winding 251. The voltage signal is rectified in the rectifier 270 to provide a DC output voltage VOUTPUT.
Serial capacitors CS1 and CS2 may, and in at least some embodiments do, make the voltages at the two terminals P1 and P2 of the primary winding substantially symmetric during transitions of current amplitude and direction along the current path from voltage node N1 through the primary winding 231 to the voltage node N2. Thus, common mode voltage variations in the primary winding may be reduced, in turn reducing dipole radiation and improving electromagnetic interference (EMI) performance.
As shown, parallel capacitor CCL1 is coupled in parallel with switch Q2 of the full-bridge driver 210 such that CCL1 is connected between voltage node N1 and ground. Capacitor CCL2 is coupled in parallel with switch Q4, such that CCL2 is connected between voltage node N2 and ground. In some embodiments, DC-DC converter 300 may comprise a resonant LC tank circuit comprising inductors 332, 333 and serial capacitors CS1 and CS2. Although not shown in
In some embodiments, the full bridge driver 210 is an H-bridge between VDD and ground and the DC-DC converter 300 is a resonant converter. The switches Q1, Q2, Q3 and Q4 are driven by control signals (not shown) to open and close sequentially to drive an alternating current through the primary winding 331. The frequency of the alternating current is based at least in part on a resonant frequency of the resonant LC tank circuit.
According to some aspects, when operating the DC-DC converter 300, during a first phase of an operating sequence, switches Q1 and Q4 of the H-bridge driver 210 are open while Q2 and Q3 remain closed. A current flows from VDD through voltage node N1, serial capacitance CS1 and across terminals P1 and P2 of the primary winding, before returning to voltage node N2 and into ground via serial capacitance CS2. During a second phase of the sequence, all switches Q1-Q4 are turned off in the H-bridge driver 210. This second phase is also referred to as the non-overlap period during which no switches are turned on. The remnant current in the inductor 332 flows through parallel capacitors CCL1 and CCL2 to ground. The parallel capacitors CCL1 and CCL2 enable soft switching of switches Q1 and Q4 when they are turned off at the end of the first period as well as switches Q2 and Q3 when they are turned on at the beginning of a third period, such that any given switch has nearly zero voltage on it when transitioning between current on and off states. Such zero-voltage switching is effective in both improving converter efficiency and slowing down voltage variations inside the driver and at terminals of the primary winding 331. At the end of the third phase, the driver is again configured as in the second phase, with all switches turned off. The phase sequence may then repeat from the first phase to second phase, third phase, and back to second phase. This sequence may be iterated many times.
It should be appreciated that while zero voltage switching is described in relation to the DC-DC converter 300 in
The inventors have appreciated that factors such as manufacturing tolerance and/or environmental effects may lead to variations between the switches in the full bridge or H-bridge driver circuit 210. Differences in parasitic capacitance from each one of the four switches Q1-Q4 may lead to asymmetric voltage and/or current in the primary transformer winding during different phases of the operation, which may contribute to an increase in common mode voltage at the two terminals of the primary winding and lead to increased electromagnetic interference due to increased common mode current across the isolation barrier 242. According to some aspects, the value of parallel capacitors CCL1 and CCL2 may be selected to be significantly bigger than the parasitic capacitance of each one of the four switches Q1-Q4. When parasitic capacitance mismatch between switches become much smaller compared to the selected parallel CCL1 and CCL2 values, electromagnetic interference due to the parasitic mismatch may be suppressed. The value of the parallel capacitor may be twice that of the parasitic capacitance, or five times greater, ten times greater, twenty times greater, at least ten times greater, or between twice and fifty times as great, or any value or range of values within such ranges. In one non-limiting example, the parasitic capacitance has a value of 80 pF.
In some embodiments, parallel capacitors such as CCL1 and CCL2 may be provided as internal capacitors disposed on the same substrate as the driver circuit 210. However, any suitable fabrication and packaging methods may be used.
In a preferred embodiment, the pair of serial capacitors CS1 and CS2 shown in
In some embodiments, the serial capacitors CS1 and CS2 are provided as external capacitors to the driver circuit 210 and to the primary winding 331, meaning they may be on separate substrates or even outside a packaging in which the driver circuit 210 and winding 331 are packaged. However, other configurations are possible. In one non-limiting example, each of the serial capacitors CS1 and CS2 has a value of 1 nF, although other values are possible.
According to some embodiments, precharge circuit 414 may be coupled to the full bridge driver 210, such that switch Q1aux is connected between VDD and voltage node N1 while switch Q2aux is connected between voltage node N2 and ground. Precharge circuit 414 may be activated when the DC-DC converter 400 is first turned on and when the LC tank resonator circuit comprising CS1, CS2, inductors 333, 332 have not been energized yet. When activated, precharge circuit 414 creates a current injection path from VDD, to ground through Q1aux, voltage node N1, capacitor CS2, primary winding 331, capacitor CS1, voltage node N2, and switch Q2aux. In one embodiment, a control signal 412 may be used to activate precharge circuit 414 and turn on both switches Q1aux, Q2aux to inject current to the LC tank resonator circuit and to “kick start” the resonator to shorten the amount of time for the resonator to achieve oscillation. The precharge circuit may be employed to reduce common mode current while the full bridge driver 210 is first turned on. Other forms of a precharge circuit may alternatively be implemented to achieve the same functionality.
In some embodiments, on the secondary side of the DC-DC converter 500, full diode bridge D1-D4 rectifies voltage received at terminals S1, S2 of the secondary winding 551 and converts the received voltage into output DC voltage VOUT. In one example, the diodes D1-D4 may be Schottky diodes.
In some embodiments, a parallel capacitor CCL3 is provided in parallel to the two terminals S1, S2 of the secondary winding. Parallel capacitor CCL3 may help slow down the variations of voltages at terminals S1, S2 and improve EMI performance by suppressing common mode current across the isolation barrier.
In some embodiments, a feedback loop is formed comprising the error amplifier 572, PWM comparator 574 configured to modulate the feedback (FB) signal representative of VOUT. In one example, the feedback signal is coupled to an amplifier 572 and is compared to a reference signal VREF before comparing with a 200 KHz sawtooth signal at a PWM comparator 574. The output PWM signal of the PWM comparator 574 is transmitted across transformer 541 to the primary side as a feedback signal. Encoder 523 and decoder 524 may perform any number of encoding and decoding functions, before sending the transmitted feedback signal to modulate a high frequency oscillator signal generated by oscillator 522 at the Q flip flop 518. The modulated signal is sent to the driver control signal unit 516 to generate a control signal 512 to control the switches in the precharge circuit 414 as well as the full bridge driver 210. In some embodiments, the oscillator frequency may be 10 MHz, 15 MHz, 20 MHz, 24 MHz, 30 MHz, 40 MHz, between 5 and 5 MHz, between 15 and 30 MHz, or any value or range of values within such ranges.
The DC-DC converter 500 may suppress radiation and provide improved electromagnetic interference performance. In some embodiments, the EMI performance as defined in the CISPR22 Class B standard may exceed said standard by a margin of at least 5 dB, 10 dB, 15 dB, between 5 and 15 dB, or by any value or range of values within that range. In some embodiments, the EMI performance as defined in the EN55022 Class B standard may exceed said standard by a margin of at least 5 dB, 10 dB, 15 dB, 20 dB, between 5 and 15 dB, or by any value or range of values within that range. In some embodiments, a power conversion efficiency of the DC-DC converter implemented according to aspects of the present disclosure may have a value of at least 30%, 40%, or between 30 and 40%, or between 40 and 50%.
According to some aspects of the present disclosure, control circuit 600 is configured to generate a plurality of voltage waveforms at the output of gates 622, 624 and 626 to control opening and closing of switches in the precharge circuit 414 and full bridge driver 210 in DC-DC converter 500 shown in
In some embodiments, DRV_SIG1 and DRV_SIG2 are control signals at the output of drive control signal unit 512 shown in
Control signal DRV_SIG1_AUX may be configured to drive a precharge circuit such as precharge circuit 414 as shown in
Timing diagram 700 shows that a transition to the ON state of the pulse-width modulation signal PWM may be synchronized with oscillation signals at CT_RT starting at time t1. In some embodiments, PWM may be a feedback PWM signal from PWM comparator 574 modulated by the signal FB in the output of the DC-DC converter 500 as shown in
In some embodiments, drive pulse DRV_PUL output from flip flop 608 may be modulated with the non-overlap time or break-before-make time period (between t3 and t4) based on CT_RTBBM. DRV_SIG2 is configured to periodically turn on the pair of switches Q1 and Q4 in the full bridge driver 210 at the beginning of a drive period between t5 and t9. DRV_SIG1 is configured to periodically turn on the pair of switches Q2 and Q3 in the full bridge driver 210 at the beginning of a drive period between t7 and t10. The period during which the pair of switches Q1 and Q4 is kept on (between t5 and t6) may be the first phase of the operating sequence as discussed above in relation to
DRV_SIG_AUX is configured to activate the switches in the precharge circuit 414. This is done between a period t11 and t12 proximate to the start of the output of the gate drive control signals at time t2 and prior to turning on the switches in the full bridge driver according to DRV_SIG1 and DRV_SIG2 to inject a current in the resonant circuit comprising the primary transformer winding.
At time t14, a falling edge of one of the driver signals DRV_SIG2 represents the disable signal of a driver control signal sequence. Time t14 may be different from the falling edge t13 of the signal PWM to synchronize the disable signal with the output of the driver control signal sequence. Although less than three driver periods are shown for the drive control signals DRV_SIG1 and DRV_SIG2, any suitable number of repetitions may be provided in between t2 and t14 for transmission of power across the isolation barrier in a DC-DC converter according to some embodiments of the present disclosure.
According to some aspects of the present disclosure, the exemplary gate driver circuit 800 may be a symmetric gate driver comprising two inverting amplifiers 804, 806, a first transistor stage 808 comprising 8 transistors T9-T16 and a second transistor stage 810 comprising a pair of NMOS transistors T1, T2, a pair of PMOS transistors T3, T4 and 4 transistors T5-T8.
In some embodiments, output nodes OUTA/OUTB of the symmetric gate driver 800 are configured to turn on and off the vertical pair of switches Q1 and Q4 at substantially the same time in response to a signal DRV_SIG2 according to
In the example shown in
The isolated DC-DC converters described herein may be used in applications. For example, automotive, consumer electronics, industrial, and healthcare applications may all make use of the technology described herein.
While
The terms “approximately” and “about” may be used to mean within ±20% of a target value in some embodiments, within ±10% of a target value in some embodiments, within ±5% of a target value in some embodiments, or within ±2% of a target value in some embodiments. The terms “approximately” and “about” may include the target value.