Claims
- 1. A slope gap inductor for use in an electronic circuit to reduce line harmonic current, the slope gap inductor comprising:a first inductor core portion; and a second inductor core portion positioned relative to said first inductor core portion so as to form an inductor gap, wherein the second inductor core portion includes a sloped gap surface that forms a sloped gap portion of the inductor gap having a varying gap height, and wherein the sloped gap surface has a slope value that is selected so that the slope gap inductor generates an inductance value responsive to a level of current in said inductor.
- 2. The slope gap inductor of claim 1, wherein the second inductor core portion includes a first gap surface and a second gap surface that form a first gap portion and a second gap portion, respectively, of the inductor gap.
- 3. The slope gap inductor of claim 2, wherein the first gap portion has a first height characteristic and the second gap portion has a second height characteristic, wherein the first height characteristic is less than the second height characteristic.
- 4. The slope gap inductor of claim 3, wherein the first gap surface and the second gap surface are adjacent to the sloped gap surface.
- 5. The slope gap inductor of claim 4, wherein the first and second core portions comprise an “EI” core structure, and wherein the first core portion forms the “I” structure and the second core portion forms the “E” structure.
- 6. The slope gap inductor of claim 5, wherein the sloped gap surface is located on a middle leg structure of the “E” structure.
- 7. The slope gap inductor of claim 6, wherein the slope gap surface located on the middle leg structure slopes from left to right with respect to the front face of the inductor.
- 8. The slope gap inductor of claim 6, wherein the slope gap surface located on the middle leg structure slopes from front to back with respect to the front face of the inductor.
- 9. The slope gap inductor of claim 4, wherein the first and second core portions comprise a “CI” core structure, and wherein the first core portion forms the “I” structure and the second core portion forms the “C” structure.
- 10. The slope gap inductor of claim 9, wherein the sloped gap surface is located on a leg structure of the “C” structure.
- 11. The slope gap inductor of claim 4, wherein the first and second core portions comprise an “CC” core structure, and wherein the first core portion forms the first “C” structure and the second core portion forms the second “C” structure.
- 12. The slope gap inductor of claim 11, wherein the sloped gap surface is located on a leg structure of the first “C” structure.
- 13. The slope gap inductor of claim 4, wherein the first and second core portions comprise an “LL” core structure, and wherein the first core portion forms the first “L” structure and the second core portion forms the second “L” structure.
- 14. The slope gap inductor of claim 13, wherein the sloped gap surface is located on a leg structure of the first “L” structure.
- 15. The slope gap inductor of claim 1, wherein the slope gap surface is comprised of a plurality of sloped surfaces.
- 16. The slope gap inductor of claim 15, wherein at least two of the plurality of sloped surfaces overlap each other.
- 17. A method for providing a slope gap inductor for use in an electronic circuit to reduce line harmonic current, the method comprising steps of:determining current requirements of the inductor; determining a geometry for the inductor; calculating a minimum and a maximum gap size; calculating incremental gap sizes between the minimum and the maximum gap sizes; calculating inductance values for inductor segments associated with the minimum, maximum, and incremental gap sizes; deriving an effective average inductance for the inductor segments; and tuning the inductor segments until the effective average inductance approximates a theoretical curve.
- 18. The method of claim 17, wherein the step of tuning comprises a step of tuning cross sectional areas associated with the inductor segments until the effective average inductance approximates the theoretical curve.
- 19. The method of claim 18, further comprising a step of selecting a higher nA product when the effective average inductance is below the theoretical curve.
- 20. The method of claim 18, further comprising a step of selecting a lower nA product when the effective average inductance is above the theoretical curve.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This Application claims priority from co-pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/227,953 filed on Aug. 25, 2000 and entitled, SLOPE GAP INDUCTOR FOR LINE HARMONIC CURRENT REDUCTION, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety for all purposes.
US Referenced Citations (6)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
Wölfle, et al., “Power Factor Correction for AC-DC Converters with Cost Effective Inductive Filtering,” 2000 IEEE, pp. 332-337, Jun. 2000. |
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60/227953 |
Aug 2000 |
US |