This invention relates to single-inductor switch-mode power conversion circuit topologies which function to produce bipolar outputs of positive and negative polarity. This class of power converters is sometimes referred to as SI-MO (Single-Inductor, Multiple-Output).
Several types of power converters are known in the prior art, the most common type being the Single-Inductor, Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output (SI-MIMO) power converter. U.S. Pat. No. 7,256,568 describes a step-down or buck converter in which the input-side and output-side switches are used for the dual purposes of time-multiplexing various input sources and output loads and performance of the buck mode of operation. Additionally, U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,222,352; 7,061,214; and 7,224,085 are directed to various SI-MO buck converters. However, unlike the preset invention, the circuit topologies and switch sequence operations described in the prior art do not provide buck-boost capability with the generation of bipolar output voltages.
U.S. Patent Application No. 2004/0201281 A1 describes a group of switch-mode converter topologies which employ the Pseudo Continuous Conduction Mode (PCCM) of operation in which a switch selectively shunts the inductor. By contrast, the present invention operates in either Discontinuous Conduction Mode (DCM) or Continuous Conduction Mode (CCM), as required by load current conditions, without use of the PCCM technique. The foregoing acronyms are commonly used in the art, as set forth by Erickson & Maksimovic, Fundamentals of Power Electronics, 2nd Ed., Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,075,295 describes a SI-MO boost type power converter. However, like other known power converters, this power converter does not provide the buck-boost or bipolar voltage output capabilities of the present invention.
Finally, U.S. Pat. No. 5,617,015 describes SI-MO buck, buck-boost, and SEPIC switch-mode converters, but using a comparator-controlled, threshold-activated hysteretical regulation control technique. This is unlike the power converter of the present invention, which develops proportional continuous control signals by evaluating error feedback levels.
In the design of portable electronic products, such as mobile communications gear, there is a need for low-cost, efficient, and physically compact power conversion circuits. For example, the required positive and negative voltages powering a cell phone's active-matrix organic LED display driver are sometimes generated using a two-inductor switch-mode power supply. Since inductors tend to be relatively large and represent additional cost, a single-inductor approach which produces bipolar outputs would be attractive. In accordance with the present invention, a single-inductor switch-mode converter produces bipolar output voltages and is capable of buck-boost operation to either step up or step down the input source voltage.
The power converter of the present invention employs a single inductor and produces two output voltages of opposite polarity with respect to ground from a single input supply voltage. Its buck-boost capability permits the output voltages to be either higher or lower than the input supply voltage source and to be independently adjustable by means of feedback component selection. These important features are accomplished through the use of a five-switch bridge. Two of the switches are capable of steering inductor current to ground which, under direction from a controller, allows inductor current to be diverted away from either output as needed to maintain proper output voltage regulation. In the preferred embodiment, the inductor current can be delivered to both outputs during a single switching cycle. The result is a lower output voltage ripple compared to prior art power converters which steer pulses of inductor current to an output terminal on alternating switch cycles.
The five-switch configuration of the present power converter relieves constraints on the ratio of the output currents delivered by the single inductor to the positive and negative output terminals over a wide range of input voltages. By contrast, the prior art four-switch power converters are subject to those constraints.
Referring now to
A controller 115 may utilize any of a number of control techniques, such as CPM, DPM or PFM, as detailed below, and may employ an error amplifier and pulse width modulator (PWM) sub-blocks, all of which may be selected and configured by persons having ordinary skill in the art. Controller 115 serves to provide independent activation of all five switches 101, 102, 103, 104, 105 via signal lines 118, 119, 120, 121, 122 and to organize the charge and discharge cycles of current flowing through inductor 108. By sensing the voltages at output terminals 111, 113, controller 115 serves to activate the appropriate ones of switches 101, 102, 103, 104, 105 to direct the currents at terminals 116, 117 of inductor 108 either to the respective output terminals 111, 113 or to ground terminal 107, as required to maintain proper output voltage regulation. The voltage regulation set-points maintained by controller 115 at output terminals 111, 113 are established by means of conventional feedback loop elements internal to controller 115 that serve to sense the output voltages at output terminals 111, 113 and compare each of them to a reference voltage to produce a feedback error signal. Controller 115 then processes the feedback error signal to produce a control signal which, when applied to conventional circuitry, acts to minimize the error signal. For example, those skilled in the art will recognize that sensing the output voltages may be accomplished using passive component voltage dividers employing resistors and/or capacitors such that, in conjunction with the reference voltage, an error amplifier, compensator, and pulse width modulator, an output voltage regulation set-point can be established. By varying the sensing component ratio and/or reference voltages, the positive and negative output voltage regulation set-points can be adjusted independently of each other to produce output voltages at output terminals 111, 113 that differ in magnitude from each other, if so desired.
In addition, activation of the five switches 101, 102, 103, 104, 105 by controller 115 may be dependent on achieving a proper duty ratio or pulse width as required in the conventional duty programmed mode (DPM) of operation of power converters. Alternatively, activation of switches 101, 102 by controller 115 may be dependent on setting a desired current through inductor 108 by using the conventional current programmed mode (CPM) of power converter operation. CPM includes both the conventional peak current and valley current methods, in which the inductor 108 current ramp is started or terminated if it passes above or below a threshold value set by sensing the voltage at output terminals 111, 113. Additionally, rather than employing a constant period switching cycle as in CPM or DPM, controller 115 may employ a conventionally-implemented pulse frequency mode (PFM) for controlling the current flow through inductor 108 under light load conditions in order to improve converter efficiency. The conventional details of operation of CPM, DPM, and PFM power converters, including the use of voltage dividers, reference voltages, error amplifiers, compensators, pulse width modulators, etc., required to implement each of these power converter modes, may be readily understood with reference to the Erickson & Macksimovic text cited above.
In the embodiment of controller 115 illustrated in
Operation of the five-switch bridge of the power converter circuit of
Since both of the output terminals 111, 113 are fed by the current flowing through the single inductor 108, a critical factor in the operation and control of the converter switching involves the relative matching of current 112 flowing out of positive output terminal 111 with the current 114 flowing into negative output terminal 113. In particular, output voltages on capacitors 109, 110 could experience pump-up or decay due to excessive or inadequate current delivery to the respective one of output terminals 111, 113. In this regard, three cases of output current matching and associated switch activation are considered. The case in which output current 112 is equal to output current 114 is illustrated by the timing diagrams of
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