1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to switching power regulator circuits, and more specifically, to a cascaded switching power converter in which an auxiliary winding power supply is provided with energy from a final power converter stage by operating the switching power converter in a low energy transfer mode.
2. Background of the Invention
In order to supply power to control circuits of a line-powered switching power converter, a low voltage power supply is needed, typically between 3V and 12V at a few milliamperes of current. However, until the power converter is operating, the only source typically available is the AC power line. The high voltage of the AC power line makes it impractical to use resistors to drop the voltage to the required voltage for the controller, as the power dissipation in the resistor will typically be on the order of several Watts.
Therefore, an auxiliary winding provided on one of the converter magnetics is frequently used to supply power to the converter controller integrated circuit (IC), since a lower voltage can be generated through use of the auxiliary winding, therefore reducing wasted power. The auxiliary power supply could be operated from the first stage, but in an AC line-powered cascaded converter, the first stage has inductor/transformer currents that vary with the input voltage. In cascaded converters in which the first stage is a power factor corrector (PFC), the input current will vary directly with the input voltage. In other cascaded converters in which the line input is rectified and filtered, unless the filter has a low ripple under all loading conditions, and therefore is quite large, there will still be substantial AC variation on the input at high load conditions. Therefore, it is desirable in such applications, to place the auxiliary winding on one of the magnetic components in the second stage. In a cascaded power converter, the second stage is generally not activated until the output voltage of the first stage has reached a level that ensures the second stage will operate properly. Therefore, the resistor drop power supply configuration, generally with a Zener diode to regulate the output voltage, is generally used at least until the second stage is started, lowering overall efficiency and raising the level of heat generated by the power supply.
A second stage auxiliary power supply provided from a DC-DC converter stage that receives its input from a first stage PFC still has an output voltage that varies with the intermediate node voltage at the input of the DC-DC converter, which varies with the magnitude of the AC power line voltage provided at the input to the PFC. In order to ensure that there is sufficient voltage available to operate the controller IC under all input line conditions, the maximum auxiliary power supply output voltage will typically be much higher than the minimum required output voltage. Therefore, the IC must either be designed to handle the full range of power supply voltages that may be provided from the auxiliary winding or the voltage must be regulated, e.g., with a Zener diode circuit, wasting power, dissipating heat, and typically reducing reliability.
Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a cascaded power converter that can supply internal controller circuits with an auxiliary power supply operated from the second (or later) stage of the cascaded power converter. It would further be desirable to provide such an auxiliary power supply that can operate from a widely varying auxiliary winding voltage, without requiring a Zener diode or another lossy regulation technique.
The above stated objective of providing a cascaded power converter with an auxiliary power supply circuit operated from a second or later stage, is provided in a cascaded switching converter and a method of operation of the switching converter.
The cascaded switching converter has a first stage that receives its input from a power source, which may be an AC power line and has an output coupled to an intermediate node. The cascaded switching converter also has a second stage having an input coupled to the intermediate node and an output providing an output of the cascaded power converter. An auxiliary winding is provided on a magnetic coupling element of the second stage, and the second stage includes a start-up control circuit that operates the second stage in a low energy transfer mode during start-up of the second stage and prior to start-up of the first stage to provide a voltage at the auxiliary winding. Therefore, the auxiliary power supply can operate during startup of the second stage without generating substantial current at the output of the cascaded power converter. The magnetic coupling element may be a transformer that does not store substantial energy during operation, or an inductor or transformer that transfers energy by discrete current switching.
The auxiliary winding may be provided to an auxiliary power supply circuit having a selectable operating mode that has a different input to output voltage characteristic for each operating mode. The selection of the auxiliary power supply's operating mode may be made in response to measuring the output voltage of the auxiliary power supply, and may be performed dynamically, providing a hysteretic controller that further improves the efficiency of the auxiliary power supply.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following, more particular, description of the preferred embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The present invention encompasses auxiliary power supply circuits in cascaded converters and methods for providing power to control and/or other circuits internal to a cascaded switching power converter, in which the auxiliary power supply is provided from a second (or later) stage of the cascaded switching power converter. The cascaded power converter may be a power factor corrector (PFC) followed by a DC-DC converter stage. A low energy transfer mode is provided in the second (or later) stage of the cascaded converter. The low energy transfer mode provides enough energy to charge the output of the auxiliary power supply, which is operated from an auxiliary winding of one of the magnetic components of the second stage. The low energy transfer mode generally has a much lower switching rate and a lower pulse width than the switching rate and pulse width of the second stage in normal operation, so that the load connected to the output of the cascaded converter is not disrupted/powered during the low energy transfer mode of operation.
An auxiliary power supply circuit having a selectable operating mode is used to change the output/input voltage characteristic of the auxiliary power supply to compensate for changes in the input voltage of the second stage. For example, prior to operation of a PFC input stage, the peak of the input voltage may be available across an intermediate node that interconnects the stages, while the peak-to-peak voltage may be available after the first stage is operational, resulting in a change of 2:1 in the available voltage from the auxiliary winding. The operating mode of the auxiliary power supply can be used to compensate for this change as well as others, and can be operated in a hysteretic feedback configuration in which the mode is selected to regulate the auxiliary power supply output voltage.
Referring now to
DC-DC converter 15 includes an auxiliary power supply 16 that supplies power to controller 10 for operation of internal circuits as well as to provide the gate drive currents that operate switching devices in PFC 14 and DC-DC converter 15. Until auxiliary power supply 16 is generating sufficient voltage to operate at least some of the circuits within controller 10, power is obtained through resistor RS1 and resistor RS2. Auxiliary power supply 16 is operated from an auxiliary winding aux provided from a magnetic coupling element of DC-DC converter 15. Therefore, auxiliary winding aux only generates an output voltage VAUX after DC-DC converter 15 has started switching. A normal sequence of operation of a typical cascaded converter similar to that of cascaded switching power converter 8, would be to start operation of PFC 14 once the voltage across capacitor CRECT has reached a predetermined threshold voltage, and then to start operation of DC-DC converter 15 after voltage VLINK across capacitor CLINK has reached a steady-state value as indicated by voltage VLINK reaching another predetermined threshold voltage. However, cascaded switching power converter 8, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, provides a low energy transfer mode in which DC-DC converter 15 can be started at the same time as, or alternatively before, PFC 14 is operating.
Referring now to
DC-DC converter 15 is a forward push-pull converter that switches transistors N2 and N3 across split halves of a primary winding of a transformer T1 in sequence to generate a bipolar power waveform. At the secondary winding of transformer T1, the bipolar power waveform is rectified by diodes D2 and D3, and filtered by inductor L2 in combination with capacitor COUT. Transformer T1 also supplies auxiliary winding aux as described above. A resistor RIS provides a voltage drop that is supplied to switching controller 10. The voltage drop across resistor RIS is proportional to the current being switched through transistor N2 or transistor N3, providing current-mode feedback indicative of the current provided through a load, such as light-emitting diodes LEDs of
In an illustrative example of operation, prior to switching any of the switching transistors N1-N3, approximately 160VDC (the peak voltage of a typical AC power line source) is available across capacitor CLINK due to peak detection of the rectified signal appearing across capacitor CRECT. Once the voltage obtained through resistor RS1 and resistor RS2 is sufficient to operate controller and initialization of controller has been performed, controller 10 begins to operate PFC 14 to boost and regulate the voltage provided across capacitor CLINK. Controller 10 also begins to switch transistors N2 and N3 in DC-DC converter 15 for short durations at a very low repetition rate, e.g., 20 kHz, which while insufficient to provide much current through light-emitting diodes LEDs, e.g. <5% of the nominal current and for short durations, provides enough current through an auxiliary winding aux of transformer T1 to generate auxiliary power supply output voltage VAUX. Since transistors N2 and N3 are switched at a low rate, the current requirements from auxiliary power supply 16 are also lower than the requirements during normal switching operation of DC-DC converter 15. Once voltage VLINK has increased sufficiently, controller 10 places DC-DC converter 15 in normal operating mode. Once voltage VLINK has increased to its full value, the available voltage across auxiliary winding aux is approximately twice the voltage present during the startup low energy transfer mode, since the output of PFC 15 doubles once switching of transistor N1 begins. The operating mode of auxiliary power supply 16 is changed at this time, according to the mode selection signal mode provided from controller 10, or by internal detection of the mode selection condition as will be described in detail below.
While the above-described operation sequence is for start-up, in application such as the illustrated LED lighting application, when light-emitting diodes LEDs are completely off, which may be done during dimming according to a duty factor, or at 100% dimming, the output is de-activated by stopping switching of DC-DC converter 15 while PFC 14 continues to regulate voltage VLINK. Therefore, in order to maintain voltage VAUX at the output of auxiliary power supply 16, the low energy transfer mode of DC-DC converter 15 can be entered again, and the small amount of current generated through light-emitting diodes LEDs will not disrupt the dimming operation.
After startup or leaving dimming mode and returning to normal operation, if auxiliary power supply 16 included only a linear regulation circuit, such as a Zener diode, then the power dissipated in auxiliary power supply 16 would be approximately the same as the power delivered to controller 10, assuming that the voltage delivered to controller 10 must be the same prior to the startup of PFC 14 and after the startup of PFC 14. Therefore, auxiliary power supply 16 of the illustrated embodiment includes a voltage doubler having a selectable operating mode as mentioned above. Auxiliary power supply 16 produces a DC output having a magnitude substantially equal to half of the peak-to-peak voltage available across auxiliary winding aux in one operating mode, and a DC output having a magnitude substantially equal to the average of the peak magnitudes of the voltage available across auxiliary winding aux in another operating mode. In both operating modes, the actual voltage provided at the output of auxiliary power supply 16 will be reduced by circuit voltage drops. During startup, and prior to controller 10 beginning normal operation of DC-DC converter 15, auxiliary power supply 16 is placed in doubler mode by asserting control signal mode which can be provided from controller 10 or can be determined within auxiliary power supply 16 as will be illustrated below. After PFC 14 has increased the voltage available across capacitor CLINK, auxiliary power supply 16 is either placed in non-doubler mode, or is operated in a hysteretic regulation mode as will be described in further detail below.
Referring now to
In the doubler operating mode of auxiliary power supply 16, during a negative phase of the voltage across auxiliary winding aux, diode D13 conducts and capacitor C1 charges to the negative peak of the voltage available across auxiliary winding aux, less the voltage drop of diode D13, and during this phase, diode D12 is reverse-biased. During the next positive phase of the voltage available across auxiliary winding aux, diode D13 is reverse-biased and diode D12 conducts. The voltage across auxiliary winding aux during the positive phase is added to the voltage that was placed on capacitor C1 during the previous negative phase, resulting in a “voltage addition.” The voltage doubler circuit implemented by auxiliary power supply 16 in the first operating mode is referred to as a voltage doubler by convention, which in the illustrated application is true since the push-pull operation of transistors N2 and N3 result in substantially equal voltage negative and positive pulses across auxiliary winding aux.
In a second mode of operation of auxiliary power supply 16, transistor N10 is de-activated, and diodes D11-D14 act as a full-wave bridge rectifier that rectifies the AC-coupled voltage available across auxiliary winding aux as coupled through capacitor C1. Since auxiliary winding aux is AC-coupled, the DC potential between the inputs of the bridge rectifier formed by diodes D11-D14 can be non-zero and will assume the difference between the positive and negative peaks of the voltage available across auxiliary winding aux appears across capacitor C1. Therefore, the positive and negative peak voltages provided by the outputs of the bridge rectifier formed by diodes D11-D14, which provides the output of auxiliary power supply 16 in the second operating mode is ideally half of the voltage produced in the first operating mode, but both output voltages will differ from the above output voltage due to diode and other circuit voltage drops.
As mentioned above, controller 10 can signal auxiliary power supply 16 to leave the voltage doubler mode after PFC 14 is operational or when DC-DC converter 15 enters normal operating mode. Alternatively, the two operating modes of auxiliary power supply 16 can be used in conjunction to form a regulator. Auxiliary power supply 16 of
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form, and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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