The invention concerns in general the technical field of switched-mode power supplies where a primary side and a secondary side are linked together through a transformer. Especially the invention concerns the suppression of electromagnetic interference in such switched-mode power supplies.
The operation of a switched-mode power supply includes rapid changes in electric currents through inductive circuit elements, which in turn is a known source of electromagnetic interference (EMI). In order not to disturb the operation of other electric devices, and also in order to reduce the unnecessary loading of the components of the power supply itself, it would be advantageous to suppress the various sources of electromagnetic interference as much as possible. Two known and widely used approaches for EMI suppression involve the use of filter components in the power supply proper and its connections, and the use of conductive, shielding enclosures around power supplies and/or or their parts.
Viewed from a first aspect, there can be provided a switched-mode power supply, comprising a transformer with a primary winding and a secondary winding, and a switch coupled in series with said primary winding and configured to repeatedly interrupt a current through said primary winding. The switched-mode power supply may comprise an inductor located differently with reference to magnetic fields that said primary and secondary windings are configured to induce, and a connection between said inductor and a circuit that contains one of said primary and secondary windings; wherein said connection is configured to connect from said inductor to said circuit a first voltage that has a waveform representative of and a polarity opposite to a second voltage induced in the switched-mode power supply by leakage flux of said transformer at a switching moment of said switch. Thereby effective suppression of common-mode electromagnetic interference may be achieved.
Viewed from another aspect, there can be provided a method for operating a switched-mode power supply, comprising repeatedly interrupting a current through a primary winding in a transformer. The method may comprise inducing a first voltage that has a waveform representative of and a polarity opposite to a second voltage induced by leakage flux of said transformer at a moment of interrupting said current, and connecting said first voltage to a circuit that contains one winding of said transformer. Thereby a reduction in a level of common-mode electromagnetic interference in said switched-mode power supply may be achieved.
The exemplary embodiments presented in this text are not to be interpreted to pose limitations to the applicability of the appended claims. The verb “to comprise” is used in this text as an open limitation that does not exclude the existence of also unrecited features. The features recited in depending claims are mutually freely combinable unless otherwise explicitly stated.
The novel features which are considered as characteristic of the invention are set forth in particular in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, both as to its construction and its method of operation, together with additional objects and advantages thereof, will be best understood from the following description of specific example embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Examples of switched-mode power supplies and methods will now be described with reference to
Embodiments of the present invention are related to common-mode interference. According to a finding, common-mode interference is in many cases related with a voltage induced in a part of a switched-mode power supply by leakage flux in the transformer. The concepts of leakage flux and its effects are therefore briefly discussed.
In order to implement the energy transfer from the primary side to the secondary side as efficiently as possible, the primary and secondary windings should be magnetically as closely linked to each other as possible. If the magnetic field of the windings is illustrated with magnetic flux lines, as many of them as possible should encircle the cross section of the conductors of both windings. However, in practical transformers some magnetic flux of one winding will always remain uncoupled to the other winding. In
Leakage flux is not only a property of the outer winding in a transformer configuration like that of
During the operation of a switched mode power supply energy is repeatedly stored in and discharged from the leakage flux. In the example transformer of
It should be underlined that the first and second serially coupled inductors 301 and 302 do not physically exist. They are just graphical representations of the concept of leakage inductance.
High voltages in electrically conductive parts located close to each other cause capacitive coupling, which is the general name of energy transfers that take place through an electric field rather than a magnetic field. In particular, the relatively high voltages induced by the energy discharging from the leakage flux cause common-mode voltage over the transformer through capacitive coupling.
In addition to the transformer there is an inductor 501 that is located differently with reference to magnetic fields that said primary and secondary windings are configured to induce. Due to its location, the inductor 501 acts as a kind of sensor that measures the leakage flux. For example, if the inductor 501 is to measure the leakage flux associated with the primary winding 105, its location “differently with reference to magnetic fields that said primary and secondary windings are configured to induce” is most advantageously such that a larger portion of the magnetic flux of the primary winding than that of the secondary winding is coupled with the inductor 501.
Due to its location, the inductor 501 will experience an induced voltage waveform at the switching moment when the primary current is interrupted. Utilizing this induced voltage waveform to counteract the common-mode interference caused by the energy discharging from the leakage flux is possible, if there is a connection between the inductor 501 and a circuit that contains one of the primary and secondary windings. The connection is most advantageously such that said voltage waveform is representative of and has a polarity opposite to a second voltage induced in said switched-mode power supply by leakage flux of the transformer at said switching moment of the switch. In other words, the induced voltage waveform at the inductor 501 has preferably a polarity opposite to the waveform of the common-mode voltage over the transformer.
Comparing to the more general description above, the “circuit that contains one of the primary and secondary windings” is here the primary current path, and the “connection between the inductor 501 and said circuit” is here the connection of the inductor 501 with the switch 106 of the primary current path. By selecting the polarity of the inductor appropriately, it can be ensured that the first voltage induced in the inductor 501 has the desired polarity, i.e. opposite to that of a second voltage induced in the switched-mode power supply by leakage flux of the transformer at said switching moment of the switch.
In the example switched-mode power supply of
Operating a switched-mode power supply like that of
The primary side of a switched-mode power supply may contain capacitors between the positive and negative rails of the primary current. In the example coupling of
The short transients that are visible in the voltage graph of
In the switched-mode power supply of
The transformer has an auxiliary winding 904 which has an opposite polarity to the capacitively coupling voltage. Commonly, the highest voltage is in the primary and this causes the strongest capacitive coupling. In this case the auxiliary winding 904 has an opposite polarity to the primary voltage. A series coupling of the auxiliary winding 904 and a capacitor 901 has been coupled in parallel with the inductor 501. By using a properly selected small capacitor 901 the effect of the capacitive coupling can be substantially negated. The high frequency spikes 701 and 702 can also follow due to some other reason than capacitive coupling. The described capacitive cancellation process can still be used, if the frequency content of the pulses are opposite in phase. A relatively small capacitance value of the capacitor 901 is usually enough; in an example arrangement according to an embodiment of the invention a capacitance of 1 picofarad was used.
Similarly as in
The switched-mode power supply may also comprise capacitors between the positive and negative rails of the primary current. In the example of
A regular, pulsed common mode interference is relatively easy to suppress. Thus the voltage vs. time graph of
Placing the inductor 501 physically so that it is located differently with reference to magnetic fields that the primary and secondary windings are configured to induce can be done conveniently by selecting properly the installing locations of the transformer and the inductor on a circuit board.
As an alternative, the inductor the task of which is to sense the magnetic flux related to the leakage inductance can be built as a part of the transformer. From the technology of transformers it is well known that several windings can be placed around a common core or otherwise within the common transformer structure in various ways. Again the most appropriate configuration, where the additional inductor can sense clearly enough the magnetic flux related to the leakage inductance, can be found e.g. by experimenting.
The examples presented in this description are only examples of the applicability of the invention and should not be construed limiting the scope of protection defined in the appended claims. For example, in all drawings such parts and components of the switched-mode power supply have been omitted that have little or no significance to the generation and suppression of common-mode electromagnetic interference. Also even if both drawings 5 and 11 appear to suggest that the longitudinal axes of the transformer windings should be at a right angle against the longitudinal axis of the additional inductor, this is just a choice related to graphical clarity and does not limit selecting the directions of the longitudinal axes differently. In many cases the windings are not even cylindrical, in which case it may become completely irrelevant to speak of any longitudinal axes or their directions.
An important class of alternative embodiments include switched-mode power supplies where the leakage-flux-sensing inductor is connected to the secondary winding and not to the primary as in the previously described embodiments. Since the common-mode voltage illustrated in
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PCT/FI2012/050158 | 2/17/2012 | WO | 00 | 8/14/2013 |
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WO2012/110709 | 8/23/2012 | WO | A |
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