This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 22159837.8, filed on 2 Mar. 2022, entitled “METHOD OF CONTROLLING A QUASI RESONANT CONVERTER AND RELATED INDUCTION COOKTOP,” the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present disclosure relates to voltage converters and more in particular to methods of controlling a quasi resonant (“QR”) converter usable for realizing induction cooktops and for induction heating items of cookware placed above a heating coil powered by the QR converter. A QR converter may generate a ticking noise and an output switch associated with the QR converter may dissipate a suboptimal amount of power.
The present disclosure addresses those issues, among other ways, by discharging purposely a DC-bus capacitor during an OFF interval of the QR converter so that the DC-bus capacitor is substantially discharged when a new ON interval of the QR converter is started. For example, a control line can be included that senses the voltage on a DC-bus and turns ON/OFF a controlled output switch S of the QR converter with a train of pulses so that the voltage on the DC-bus tracks a falling edge of a half-wave of a rectified AC input voltage. For simplicity of language a “DC-bus capacitor” is mentioned herein. However, it should be understood that multiple DC-bus capacitors could be utilized instead of a single DC-bus capacitor.
In the drawings:
Cooking appliances, in particular induction cooking appliances, can have at least one main switching unit to supply induction heating elements with a supply voltage through actuation of a main energy supply, and an energy storage unit, in particular a bus capacitor, which is provided in particular for signal smoothing through the charging of an energy storage unit with a charge potential.
QR converters 10 and 10A are shown in
QR converter 10A of
QR converters 10, 10A are a particular type of switching unit that can be used as AC current generators for the induction cooktop 18. Such converters use just one solid state switch and only one resonant capacitor to generate a variable frequency/variable amplitude current to feed the induction heating coil 16. When properly designed and matched with their load, these QR converters 10, 10A can operate in the so called “soft-switching” mode, which consists in having the switching device commutating when either the voltage across it and/or the current flowing through it are null.
A drawback the QR converters 10, 10A lies in the range of output power being achievable in the Soft-Switching regime. In particular, when the output power being regulated falls below a given limit, the inverter fails in operating in soft-switching mode, leading to an increase in thermal losses (hard-switching) and Electromagnetic Interference (“EMI”). Those limitations can lead to a relatively low regulation range, which is defined as the ratio between maximum achievable power (limited by maximum voltage across the controlled output switch S) and the minimum achievable power (limited by the losses for hard-switching at turn on). This situation can be an issue when a user wants to supply low power to a cookware 22.
One way to overcome the aforementioned limitation for the QR converters 10, 10A is to operate the inverter in the so-called burst-mode or ON-OFF mode (as shown in
For example, if the user wants to supply 100 W and the minimum power to have soft-switching is 700 W, the system can operate in the ON/OFF mode, in which the 700 W is supplied for a short time interval T1, and for the remainder of the time interval T2 the QR converter 10, 10A is kept off, to obtain an average power delivery of 100 W. As mentioned, however, two things can happen:—a ticking acoustic noise from the cookware 22 can be produced; and—the output switch S produces dissipated power (high hard-switching) at the first activation after the T2 interval.
Stated another way, during operation of the QR converter 10, 10A, a ticking acoustic noise can be generated, for example when the QR converter 10, 10A is delivering to the cookware 22 a power lower than the minimum power required for the QR converter 10, 10A to operate in the soft-switching mode. In this situation, and other similar conditions, energy is transferred to the cookware 22 in a short interval of time, such interval being comparable to the switching time of the controlled output switch S. For example, this can happen when the DC-bus capacitance is charged at the peak of the rectified mains line voltage (e.g. 325 V for nominal RMS line voltage of 230 V), and the controlled output switch S is turned on for the first time after a long period of being kept off. For example, if the QR converter 10, 10A is kept inactive for at least 10 ms, the first time it is turned on again after that period has elapsed this situation will occur. In those same conditions, there is also a large amount of power dissipation occurring in the output switch S, the so-called hard-switching condition. This can also occur every time the output switch S is turned ON for the first time, after the main relay closure.
Another situation where ticking noise can occur is during the so-called “pan detection” operation, that is when the presence of the cookware 22 on the induction heating cooktop 18 is detected. The detection of the cookware 22 can be accomplished by feeding power to the induction heating coil 16 and by assessing at least an electrical parameter of the QR converters 10, 10A of the induction heating cooktop 18 which is modified when cookware 22 is placed on one of the induction heating coils 16. Given that one method to perform the pan detection operation is to stimulate the induction heating coils 16 with short PWM pulses, and record the value of the electrical parameter of the QR converters 10, 10A, if the cookware 22 detection is operated when the DC-bus capacitor is charged, this could typically cause the noise to be produced.
The QR converter of this disclosure, including QR converters 10, 10A, may be equipped with a control line that senses the voltage on the DC-bus and turns ON/OFF the controlled output switch S of the QR converter with a train of pulses so that the voltage on the DC-bus tracks a falling edge of a half-wave of the rectified AC input voltage. Doing that presents two technical advantages: 1) it eliminates the occurrences of the ticking noise, thus resulting in a more pleasing experience for the user; and 2) it reduces the power dissipation on the controlled output switch S. In other words, at least part of these drawbacks are overcome according to this disclosure by discharging purposely the DC-bus capacitor during an OFF interval of the QR converter 10, 10A so that the DC-bus capacitor is substantially discharged when a new ON interval of the QR converter 10, 10A is started. According to an aspect, the DC-bus capacitor may be discharged during an OFF interval by closing the output switch S of the QR converter 10, 10A.
To elaborate, in reference particularly to
Discharging the capacitance of the DC-bus before powering the load is an efficient technique for preventing the generation of the ticking noise when the QR converter 10, 10A is operated by periodically alternating ON time intervals T1, during which a load coupled with the L-C resonant pair is powered by the QR converter 10, 10A, to OFF time intervals T2, during which the load is not powered by the QR converter 10, 10A. The ticking noise is typically generated when the QR converter 10, 10A is operated to deliver an average power smaller than the minimum power that can be delivered to the load while maintaining the output switch S in soft-switching operation. In these situations, shown for example in
The ticking noise may be avoided by switching ON/OFF the controlled output switch S in such a manner as the DC voltage on the capacitance of the DC-bus between the high-side line and the low-side line is nullified before an ON time interval T1 begins, as shown in the time graphs of
Making reference to the exemplary time graphs of
With the exemplified pattern the discharge is almost linear, obtaining a residual voltage on the DC-bus of about 20 V at the beginning of the ON time interval. With a voltage of about 20 V across the output switch S, the power delivery can occur without generating an acoustic noise and in a low hard switching condition (nonnull initial voltage of relatively small value).
According to an aspect of this disclosure, the QR converter 10, 10A may be equipped with a comparator configured to compare the DC voltage on the capacitance of the DC-bus with a trailing profile of the rectified replica of a half-wave of the AC voltage received at the input AC terminals of the rectifier stage Rect, and configured to generate an error signal corresponding to a difference between the trailing edge of the rectified replica and the DC voltage on the DC-bus. The controller 20 is then configured to switch ON/OFF the controlled output switch S with a discharge duty-cycle and at a discharge switching frequency determined as a function of the error signal so as to make the DC voltage on the DC-bus track the trailing edge of the rectified replica of a half-wave of the AC voltage, until the DC voltage on the DC-bus capacitor is nullified, as shown in the exemplary time graphs of
According to an optional aspect, as shown in
The QR converters 10, 10A, 10B presented above may be used to realize the induction cooktop 18, for heating the item of cookware 22, by using the induction heating coil 16 as the inductive component of the L-C resonant pair, configured to be magnetically coupled with the item of cookware 22 to be heated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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22159837.8 | Mar 2022 | EP | regional |