An embodiment of the disclosure relates to techniques for generating a controlled voltage and more particularly to the methods for controlling a switching regulator.
A block diagram of a voltage regulator that supplies a load L through a cable C is depicted in
Optionally, a second control system may be present to regulate the current delivered by the converter.
The two control systems are mutually exclusive: if the current demanded by the load is lower than the current regulation setpoint, the voltage control system will regulate the output voltage and the current control system will be inoperative; contrarily, the current control system will take over and the voltage loop will be inoperative. Voltage control and, when present, current control use a closed-loop negative feedback: the voltage generated by the converter and current through the load, respectively VOUT and IOUT, are fed back to the error amplifiers EAV and EAC and they are compared with their references VREF and IREF, respectively.
The input signals VCV, VCC to the controller come from the error amplifiers that sense the difference between reference values (VREF and IREF) and the feedback signals (VOUT and IOUT). Depending on the input signals, the controller generates a PWM signal that drives power switches. Through a transformer, an output rectifier and a filter, energy is transferred from the supply voltage source VIN to the load L. The diagram shown in
Typically, energy is transferred to the load through a cable C. The voltage control loop keeps the voltage Vout regulated but, depending on the output current, the voltage on the load, VLOAD, will be affected by a voltage drop along the cable, out of the control loop. Thus if a zero load regulation is to be achieved, it may be necessary to compensate the drop along the cable in some way.
A simple known way of meeting this potential need is illustrated in
Another solution, that avoids the need of additional wires, is to adjust the voltage loop reference (VREF) by an amount proportional to the average output current, the value of which can be sensed directly even with a remote load. Cable drop compensation (briefly CDC) can be performed if the value of the cable resistance Rcable is known. This solution is depicted in
The transfer function of the CDC block is:
V′REF=VREF+kCDC·IOUT,
where kCDC is the cable drop compensation gain and V′REF is the adjusted reference.
In the circuit of
VOUT=kCV·VREF and VLOAD=VOUT−Rcable·IOUT,
where kCV is the voltage loop gain, VOUT is the regulated voltage and VLOAD is the real voltage on the load.
With reference to the diagram of the
V′OUT=kCV·V′REF=kCV·(VREF+kCDC·IOUT)=VOUT+kCV·kCDC·IOUT.
As the resistance Rcable is known by the application, the kCDC value is chosen in order to satisfy the condition VLOAD=VOUT, hence:
Typically, the output current is sensed directly.
A common way of sensing the output current and adjusting the voltage reference proportionally in a non-isolated step-down switching converter is illustrated in
A similar technique applied to an isolated flyback switching converter is shown in
A typical isolated flyback configuration using the optocoupler to transfer the output information from secondary side to the primary one is shown in
There is a special class of low-cost isolated converters, in which output voltage regulation is quite loosely specified and use a simpler approach, according to which there is no sensing element or any reference on the secondary side and, therefore, no specific means for crossing the isolation barrier to transfer the error signal to the primary side, as depicted in
It has been found that it is possible to use the technique of adjusting the voltage reference even in flyback switching converters that do not have any voltage or current sensing means on the secondary side, and also do not have means for transferring an error signal from the secondary side to the primary side of the converter.
It has been demonstrated that the average output current delivered by the converter may be accurately estimated using signals available on the primary side, by providing a dedicated circuit block for estimating such a value.
More precisely, the average output current IOUT is proportional to the product of Is and the ratio TONSEC/T wherein IS is the secondary peak current, TONSEC is the time during which the secondary current is flowing and T is the switching cycle.
It has been found that signals accurately proportional to the ratio TONSEC/T and to IS can be extracted from the primary side in any switching converter with primary feedback, thus it is not necessary to use dedicated sensors or means for crossing the isolation barrier from the secondary side to the primary side.
For example, a signal accurately proportional to the ratio TONSEC/T may be produced in different alternative ways:
As an alternative, a signal proportional to the ratio TONSEC/T may be produced by integrating over each switching period the logic control signal that flags the beginning and the end of demagnetization phases.
Another signal proportional to the ratio (TONSEC/T)−1 may be obtained using the charge voltage of a filter capacitor on the primary side of the switching regulator that is discharged during each demagnetization phase by a resistor and is charged by a constant current in the remaining part of each switching period.
These signals representative of the current delivered to a load are used for estimating the voltage drop on the cable that connects the regulator to the load. Therefore, it is possible to control the effective voltage on the load instead of the voltage generated on the secondary side by the switching regulator.
Embodiments of the techniques herein described for estimating the output current of a flyback switching regulator without using sensing elements on the secondary side may be used also for other useful purposes.
Primary and secondary sample current waveforms of a flyback switching converter working in discontinuous mode are depicted in
where, IS is the secondary peak current, TONSEC is the time during which the secondary current is flowing, and T is the switching-cycle period.
By adding a dedicated circuit, able to estimate the ratio TONSEC/T in the current mode IC controller, it is possible to calculate the IOUT value by the above formula. This approach may be applied to any current-mode-controlled switching converter with primary feedback.
In order to better understand the gist of this technique, the functioning of an off-line all-primary-sensing switching regulator, disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,729,443 and 6,590,789 (which are incorporated by reference) will be discussed.
An equivalent high-level circuit scheme of the switching regulator disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,590,789 for regulating the output voltage is reproduced in
An equivalent high level circuit scheme of the switching regulator disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,729,443 for regulating the output current is reproduced in
The voltage of an auxiliary winding is used by a demagnetization block DEMAG through a protection resistor. The demagnetization block DEMAG generates a logic flag
The logic flag
At steady state, the average current IC is zero. If TONSEC is the time during which the secondary current IS is flowing, it is:
which can be simplified in:
The voltage UC is then used to set the peak primary current IP:
which defines the peak secondary current IS:
The average output current IOUT can be expressed as:
By combining the previous equations, we obtain:
Thus it is possible to set the average output current of the switching regulator by fixing the reference current IREF and the resistances R and RS.
It has been found that a signal proportional to the output current can be generated by using signals already available in the primary side of the converter.
Indeed, combining equations (1) and (3), leads to the following expression:
Hence the charge voltage of the filter capacitor contains information concerning the average output current, thus it can be used for compensating the voltage drop on the cable that connects a load to a flyback switching regulator.
Moreover, during the voltage regulation, the voltage control loop signal establishes the peak primary current IP:
wherein VCV is the voltage generated by the error amplifier EAV (in the circuit of
Therefore, by combining the equations (4) and (5) it results:
In the above formula all the signals are known except for the IOUT value.
In the IC controller is inserted a dedicated CDC block for performing the division between the signals VCV and UC in order to obtain a signal proportional to the output current:
In an embodiment, the CDC block is analog, as depicted in
As an alternative, the CDC block could be digital, converting the signals VCV and UC in digital form, carrying out the division, subtracting the result from the voltage value VREF, and converting the result back into an analog signal.
The next step is to adjust the voltage reference VREF by an amount depending on the output current, as explained previously. In fact, the CDC block is designed to implement the following transfer function:
The CDC block, during the output voltage regulation, introduces a positive feedback that may compromise the stability of the primary loop. For this reason a low-pass filter is preferably added, as shown in
Looking at
This technique may be applied even by modifying the feedback voltage on the capacitor C* instead of directly acting on VREF. A sample embodiment of this type is shown in
Another way to modify the voltage feedback signal value is to generate a voltage proportional to the output current:
and to connect a resistor RCDC as shown in the
where, n is the ratio between primary and secondary windings, NOUT is the number of the windings on the secondary, NAUX is the number of the windings on the auxiliary, Rcable is the cable resistance and RS is the sensing resistor coupled to the power MOSFET source. The use of that resistor is a possible way to set the CDC gain depending on the application. In fact, applying the previous embodiments, without RCDC, the same objective can be reached by trimming the constant k value.
A signal proportional to the ratio TONSEC/T may be generated by exploiting the logic control signal
If the CDC block can be input with digital signals, then the converter DAC is not necessary.
According to an alternative embodiment, a signal proportional to the ratio TONSEC/T may be generated by the circuit of
A divider generates the signal Vratio as the ratio VC2/VC1.
The signal RESET used for discharging the capacitor C is substantially a delayed replica of the pulse T, such to zero the charge voltage of the capacitor C substantially immediately after it has been held on the capacitor C1.
According to an alternative embodiment, the voltage Vratio may be generated by integrating the signal
A CDC block suitable for using the voltage Vratio for adjusting the reference voltage VREF′ is depicted in
An embodiment of a switching regulator that employs the CDC block of
Naturally, in order to satisfy local and specific requirements, a person skilled in the art may apply to the solution described above many modifications and alterations. Particularly, although the present disclosure has been described with a certain degree of particularity with reference to described embodiment(s) thereof, it should be understood that various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form and details as well as other embodiments are possible. Moreover, it is expressly intended that specific elements and/or method steps described in connection with any disclosed embodiment of the disclosure may be incorporated in any other embodiment as a general matter of design choice.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12347889 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13069728 | US |