This invention generally relates to methods and apparatus for sensing the output current in a switch mode power supply (SMPS), in particular using primary side sensing.
We will describe improved techniques which enable the design of a Switch Mode Power Supply with a relatively accurately controlled output current limit which, in embodiments, do not need current sensing components on the secondary side of the power supply.
Many SMPS applications require the output current to be either limited to, or maintained at a particular value. One way of achieving this is by including some form of output current sensing, located on the secondary side of the converter, communicating this information back to the power converter controller located on the primary side. This provides an accurate method of current sensing but incurs the cost of additional secondary side components.
A relatively crude current limiting may be implemented by monitoring and limiting the primary side switch current to a particular value. The accuracy may be improved by sensing and integrating the current through the primary switch, correlating the time constant of the integrator to the switching period, in this way estimating the output current. However, the accuracy of output current sensing in this way is dependent, among other things, upon the efficiency of power conversion, the switching time of the switch and the like.
Background prior art relating to SMPS output current control can be found in: U.S. Pat. No. 6,833,692: Method and apparatus for maintaining an approximate constant current output characteristic in a switched mode power supply; U.S. Pat. No. 6,781,357: Method and apparatus for maintaining a constant load current with line voltage in a Switch Mode Power Supply; U.S. Pat. No. 6,977,824: Control circuit for controlling output current at the primary side of a power converter; U.S. Pat. No. 6,862,194: Flyback power converter having a constant voltage and a constant current output under primary-side PWM control; U.S. Pat. No. 6,853,563: Primary-side controlled flyback power converter; U.S. Pat. No. 6,625,042: Power supply arrangement comprising a DC/DC converter with primary-side control loop; U.S. Pat. No. 7,016,204: close-loop PWM controller or primary-side controlled power converters; and EP 0 636 889A. This latter document asserts that the average current flowing through the power switch (of an SMPS) during its conduction interval is substantially proportional to the output current of the power supply, with the proportionality factor precisely known and constant, but this is in fact true if and only if the input voltage to the SMPS is constant.
We will describe improved techniques for sensing the output current of an SMPS, and for measuring the output current by means of primary side sensing.
According to the present invention there is therefore provided a module for estimating the output current of a switch mode power supply (SMPS), said SMPS including a transformer with at least a primary winding coupled to an input of the SMPS and a secondary winding coupled to an output of the SMPS and having a power switching device to switch power to said primary winding of said transformer responsive to a drive signal, the module comprising: a current sense input to receive a current sense signal sensing a current in said primary winding of said transformer; a voltage sense input to receive a voltage sense signal from said primary or an auxiliary winding of said transformer; a drive signal input to receive said drive signal; a signal averager coupled to said drive signal input and to said current sense input to average said current sense signal over a period when said drive signal is controlling said power switching device to apply power to said primary winding and to provide an averaged current sense signal; a timing signal generator coupled to said voltage sense input to generate a timing signal indicating a duration of a period during which said secondary winding is providing power to said SMPS output; a multiplier coupled to an output of said signal averager and to an output of said timing signal generator to multiply said averaged current sense signal by a fraction of a total cycle period of said SMPS during which said secondary winding is providing power to said SMPS output, indicated by said timing signal; and an output coupled to an output of said multiplier to provide a signal estimating said output current of said SMPS.
Broadly speaking in embodiments, the module determines the average current into the primary side of the transformer or similar magnetic energy storage device during “charging” of the transformer, that is building up energy stored in a magnetic field prior to discharge on the secondary side. The result is then multiplied by the secondary side discharge time expressed as a fraction of the total cycle time of the SMPS, that is multiplying the result by Tdischarge/Ttotal. In some preferred embodiments the averager is implemented using a low-pass filter to average a current sense input signal, for example a voltage across a current sense resistor for in some other way, for example using a current sensing transformer. In embodiments the multiplying is also performed using a low-pass filter, in particular by employing a switch to selectively couple the input of a low-pass filter either to the value to be multiplied or to a reference level such as ground. By driving this switch with a control signal which has an on period (to couple the input of a low-pass filter to the signal to be scaled) which is proportional to the secondary side discharge time, that is providing a control signal with a duty time substantially equal to Tdischarge/Ttotal, the average primary side current during charging of the transformer can be scaled by the discharge time as mentioned above.
In embodiments of the module which employ one or more low-pass filters the time constant or time constants of the low-pass filters are preferably greater, for example ten times greater than the period over which the filter is averaging. Thus the low-pass filter averaging the primary side charging current should preferably have a time constant which is greater than the on time of the switch drive signal, and the time constant of a low-pass filter implementing the multiplier function should be greater than the (maximum) total cycle time of the SMPS. Therefore, in some preferred embodiments, one or both of these low-pass filters may be implemented using a switched capacitor circuit. In some particularly preferred embodiments one or both of these low-pass filters include a time-sliced resistive component to, effectively, make a resistor of the low-pass filter appear to have a larger value than in fact it has. This facilitates achieving the desirable length of time constant for a low-pass filter in this circuit.
The secondary side discharge time may be determined using one of a range of methods, examples of which are described later. However in embodiments the discharge time may be determined by a timing signal generator which comprises a comparator to compare the voltage sensed from the primary or from an auxiliary winding of the transformer with a reference to generate a timing signal. The reference may either be a fixed reference, for example a zero crossing, or may comprise a reference from an output voltage model for the SMPS, or some other reference.
The invention further provides an SMPS controller including an output current estimating module as described above. In preferred embodiments the controller includes a control module to compare the estimated output current with a target or reference output current, for controlling the SMP responsive to a difference between these two values. The SMPS may, for example comprise an oscillator driving the power switching device, and the controller may control either or both of a pulse width and a pulse frequency of the oscillator. In some preferred embodiments the control module has a zero which is configured to suppress a pole of the output current estimating module, more particularly a pole of a low-pass filter in the estimating module. In embodiments this helps to simply the control loop and hence facilitates achieving improved SMPS control.
The invention further provides an SMPS including a module and/or controller as described above.
Embodiments of the invention may be employed with a wide variety of SMPS topologies including, but not limited to, a flyback converter and a direct-coupled boost converter. The transformer may comprise a conventional transformer or an auto-transformer and the secondary side voltage may be sensed either on the primary winding (for example, using a potential divider where this voltage is high) or using an auxiliary winding on the transformer.
The SMPS may operate in either a Discontinuous Conduction Mode (DCM) or in a Continuous Conduction Mode (CCM) or at the boundary of the two, in a Critical Conduction Mode.
In a related aspect the invention provides a method of estimating an output current an SMPS, said SMPS including a transformer with a least a primary winding coupled to an input of the SMPS and a secondary winding coupled to an output of the SMPS, the method comprising: sensing a current in said primary winding of said transformer; averaging a signal from said sensed current over a period when current is flowing in said primary winding to provide an average current signal; determining an estimate of a discharge time of current through said secondary winding of said transformer; and scaling said average current signal using said discharge time to estimate said SMPS output current.
The invention still further provides as a system for estimating an output current of an SMPS, said SMPS including a transformer with at least a primary winding coupled to an input of the SMPS and a secondary winding coupled to an output of the SMPS, the system comprising: an input for sensing a current in said primary winding of said transformer; an averager for averaging a signal from said sensed current over a period when current is flowing in said primary winding to provide an average current signal; a system for determining an estimate of a discharge time of current through said secondary winding of said transformer; and a system for scaling said average current signal using said discharge time to estimate said SMPS output current.
The skilled person will understand that the above-described aspects and embodiments of the invention may be implemented using either digital or analogue hardware or a combination of the two. However some preferred embodiments are particularly convenient for substantially analogue implementation.
In a still further aspect the invention provides a switched capacitor resistor, said switched capacitor resistor comprising: first and second switched capacitor resistor terminals; a common terminal; an intermediate terminal; a capacitor coupled between said intermediate terminal and said common terminal; and a first controllable switch coupled between said first terminal and said intermediate terminal; a second controllable switch coupled between said second terminal and said intermediate terminal; and at least one resistor connected in series with one of said first and second switches between one of said first and second terminals and said intermediate terminal.
In general a controller will be provided to provide non-overlapping control signals for the two switches to control the first switch so that current flows from the first terminal onto the capacitor through a first resistor, and then off the capacitor through a second resistor to the second terminal. The control signals are preferably substantially non-overlapping so that charge is inhibited from flowing directly from the first to the second terminal.
This aspect of the invention also provides a method of implementing a switched capacitor resistor, the method comprising including at least one resistive component in said switched capacitor resistor and time-slicing said resistive component using a time-slicing signal having a duty cycle of less than 100% on time, to increase an effective value of said resistive component.
These and other aspects of the invention will now be further described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompany figures in which:
Broadly speaking we will describe techniques for estimating current on the secondary side of a transformer in a switched mode power supply (SMPS) using low-pass filters. The techniques we describe average the primary-side current twice in two time dominions, the discharge-time (on the secondary-side) and the charge-time (on the primary-side).
In preferred embodiments the drive signal for the power switch is used for sensing the charge-time, the current time on the primary-side is used for sensing the average of the primary current and the reflected voltage from the secondary winding is used for sensing the discharge time on the secondary-side. Preferably the low-pass filters are implemented using a modified switched-capacitor scheme to reduce the overall size of the passive components.
Referring to
The timer block 27 generates two timing signals, T0 and T1, by sensing the DRIVE, VS, and CS signals. T0 represents the charge-time, i.e. the time when a current is flowing through the primary side of the transformer 21. T1 represents the discharge-time, i.e. the time when a current is flowing through the secondary side of the transformer 21.
The signals T0, T1 and CS, are used in the current model (CM) block 28 to produce an output current model signal OCM which estimates the output current of the SMPS. The (constant) OCT signal represents the target output current of the secondary winding. OCM and OCT are used in the control block 26 to control the driver 25 in such a way that the OCM signal converges towards OCT.
One alternative way to sense the current is to put the current sensing resistor 31 in the return path, as shown in
Timer Block
The timer block 27 generates two timing signals, T0 and T1, by sensing the DRIVE, VS and CS signals. T0 represents the charge-time, i.e. the time when a current is flowing through the primary side of the transformer 21. T1 represents the discharge-time, i.e. the time when a current is flowing through the secondary side of the transformer 21. The waveforms of the signals are plotted in
A simple alternative to the use of an output voltage model per se is simply to compare the sensed voltage waveform with a reference level in order to generate the discharge-time signal T1.
We now outline some further techniques which may be used to generate T1. Referring again to
Output Current Model Theory
It is helpful first to consider some theory underlying embodiments of the invention.
The relation between the primary and the secondary winding of the transformer 21 can be used for estimating the output current. A plot of the input (IP) and output (OP) currents is shown in
where n is the turns-ratio between the secondary and primary winding (i.e. number of primary turns÷number of secondary turns). The average output current for the whole (SMPS cycle) period T (OCT) is:
The average output current can also be rewritten in terms of the average input current over period T, IPT using the equality:
Now the average output current can be calculated from:
Current Model Block
Returning now to the CM block 28, the equation for estimating the output current is:
Here the output current model is derived by averaging the CS signal twice and the turns ratio is normalised out. The integral over T0 calculates IP0; the integral over T1 multiplied by 1/T effectively multiplies by T1/T. In embodiments the turns ratio is a programmable parameter set according to the transformer used. An implementation of the filter is shown in
In order for the averaging to be accurate the time constants of the low-pass filters 12 and 16 should be longer than the maximal integration times, that is:
Switched-Capacitor Implementation
Since the time constants of the low-pass filters 12 and 16 is approaching milliseconds the size of the resistors and capacitors 121, 122, 161, 162 can become unrealistically large if implemented in an integrated circuit. One alternative is to use a switched capacitor (SC) circuit, as shown in
In the circuit of
The time constants for the SC low-pass filters are
However in embodiments this still might not be sufficient because the switching frequency should be high to sample the shortest CS signal accurately
For example, if the time constants are chosen τ12=10T0MAX, fs=10/T0MIN and the ratio between the maximum and minimum discharge time T0MAX/T0MIN=20 then the ratio between the capacitors 55 and 52 would become 2000.
A preferred embodiment of the current model block is shown in
where D is the duty cycle (percentage on time) of the signals P1 and P2, under the assumptions:
In an example embodiment the time constants of the low-pass filters 12 and 16 are of the order of 1 ms and the switching frequency fs is greater than MHz. An example duty cycle is of order 10% (for a sampling frequency of, say, 10 MHz giving 10 ns wide pulses every 100 ns for P1 and P2), which magnifies the values of resistors 51 and 53, and of resistors 58 and 60, by a factor of 10. As an example the switching period of an SMPS as shown in
Controller
An example embodiment of the controller 26 of
The purpose of resistor 71 is to cancel the pole from the CM 28 by inserting a zero. This way the transfer function from OC to CC only has one dominant pole at zero frequency.
The purpose of the buffer 74 is to reduce the load on the low-pass filter 16 in the current model 28.
Driver
The driver 25 in
Switched Capacitor Filters
A resistor can be implemented using a switched capacitor circuit as shown in
ΔQ=C(V1−V2)=IeqTs
Therefore the equivalent resistance is:
In the modified SC resistor circuit in
For every clock cycle the net current transported from node V1 to node V2 in
Therefore the equivalent resistance is:
Broadly speaking we have described a method of using low-pass filters to produce an output current model for a switch mode power supply and hence estimate the output current of the switch mode power supply, in particular by means of primary-side sensing. In some preferred embodiments the output current model may be implemented using switched-capacitor filters, in some particularly preferred embodiments using resistors in series with the switches in such a switched-circuit. In embodiments three signals are employed in order to create the output current model, the charge time of the primary side of the magnetic energy storage device (transformer), a primary winding current signal, and the discharge time of the secondary side. These signals may be generated using a voltage sense signal comprising a reflected voltage of the secondary of the transformer, a current sense signal that represents the current on the primary side, and a DRIVE signal that represents the on-time of the primary (power) switch. In preferred embodiments a controller for an SMPS uses this current model to control the secondary side output current of the SMPS.
However embodiments may also be employed in conjunction with a voltage control loop, preferably a primary-side sensing voltage control loop, to implement constant-voltage, constant-current control. We have previously described a number of different techniques which may be employed for output voltage regulation using primary side feedback, for example in UK patent applications numbers 0610206.5, 0610210.7, 0610208.1 and 0610211.5 all filed by the present applicant on 23 May 2006, all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. For example, in one technique a decaying peak detector is employed to provide a signal approximating a tangent to the decaying secondary side waveform (reflected in the primary or an auxiliary winding waveform), the output voltage being sampled at the knee in the reflected secondary side voltage waveform, at which point because substantially no current is flowing to the SMPS output the secondary side voltage accurately reflects the output voltage of the SMPS. In another technique the primary (or an auxiliary) voltage waveform is integrated from a point of known zero flux (and hence current) in the transformer immediately prior to switching on the power device, the point at which the integrated signal is again equal to zero corresponding to the next point at which the flux (and hence secondary current) in a transformer is zero. This signals at the point at which to sample the voltage on the auxiliary (or a primary) winding in order to obtain an accurate indication of the SMPS output voltage.
We have described the operation of embodiments of the above-described output current estimation technique in the context of an example of an SMPS operating in a Discontinuous Conduction Mode (DCM), but the techniques also work in Critical Conduction Mode and in Continuous Conduction Mode (CCM) since no particular shape is assumed for the waveforms involved; instead the described signal processing employs the actual, sensed signal waveforms.
No doubt many other effective alternatives will occur to the skilled person. It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the described embodiments and encompasses modifications apparent to those skilled in the art lying within the spirit and scope of the claims appended hereto.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/490,864, filed Jul. 21, 2006 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,342,812, which application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119 from United Kingdom Application No. 0613484.5 filed Jul. 7, 2006, which applications are incorporated herein by reference.
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