The present invention is pointed out with particularity in the appended claims. However, other features of the present invention will become more apparent and the present invention will be best understood by referring to the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompany drawings in which:
One non-limiting aspect of the present invention relates to the user of tapped inductors with the traditional buck and boost converters and extending the benefits thereof to provide a bi-directional dual voltage 14V/42V DC/DC converter that may be particularly advantageous for automotive applications wherein it may desirable to converter DC voltages between 14V and 42V, or according to another similarly fixed or variable voltage.
This brings significant advantages compared to the quadratic converters in which the conversion voltage ratio only depends on the duty cycle. The tapping of the inductor also permits a different mix of voltage and current ratings for the various elements of the circuit, and particularly for the transistor switch and diode. These components arranged in a different manner allow different kinds of dc-dc converters to be derived.
For each circuit the conversion ratio Vout/Vin in continuous conduction mode may be expressed in terms of the duty cycle δ and a constant K. The winding ratio K of the tapped coil is a function of the location of the tap (terminal b in
where N1 and N2 are the number of coil turns either side of the tap. Optionally, the characteristics of the three standard dc-dc converters may be obtained if K=1
In this tapped-inductor boost converter, the traditional converter topology of the boost is effectively extended by an additional inductor in series with the diode that is magnetically coupled with the original inductor. To achieve the magnetic coupling, both windings are on the same core and therefore no additional magnetic core is required. The use of a tapped inductor converter leads to high step-up ratio thus avoiding the extreme duty cycle and high peak currents which the active switch and diode would otherwise experience.
In the output-to-tap boost converter, the diode and switch are swapped, leading to another topology in the boost converter field. The transfer ratio in CCM, DCM, Mcrit and Doff are presented below.
Following the method of flux conservation, the transfer ratio of the output-to-tap converter in continuous conduction mode can be shown to be:
In the critical conduction mode, the current falls to zero at the end of the switching period. The expression of Mcrit for this converter is given by:
In discontinuous conduction mode, a third state is introduced in which the current in the inductor falls to zero and the circuit is in the quiescent state. Introducing this third state into the calculations yields the result:
where Doff is a function of the load condition and is given by:
The variation of Vout/Vin with δ is illustrated for various values of K in equation
An interesting characteristic of the output-to-tap boost converter is that the duty cycle at which the transfer ratio is extremely high is set by K. Indeed, if K=0.25 for instance, therefore the duty cycle at high the transfer ratio would be the highest will be 0.25, a relatively low duty cycle, increasing the efficiency of the system with relatively low component count.
Optionally, when the input voltage of the output-to-tap boost converter is ac, the output-to-tap boost converter can work as an ac/dc converter by adjusting the duty cycle at the value at which the reference voltage is achieved. As the output-to-tap boost converter integrates a tapped inductor, therefore the duty cycle can be adjusted to a value at which the device utilization is improved. Hence, it is a compromise between the Power factor correction boost converter and Flyback converter usually used as ac/dc or Power Factor correction applications.
The transfer ratio of the Input to tap buck converter has been calculated for a centre-tap situation only yielding the result:
where δ as usual is the switch duty cycle. Using the principle that the flux in the tapped inductor core will be the same immediately before and immediately after switching the more general equation for the transfer ratio can be shown to be given by:
The critical conduction mode will be reached for a value of Mcrit defined as:
The transfer ratio in discontinuous conduction mode and the expression of Doff are given by:
where Doff is given by:
The variation of Vout/Vin with δ for various values of K is shown in
The converter may include voltage input (Vin, 14V), a tapped inductor (L), a first switch (S1), a second switch (S2), a first diode (D1), a second diode (D2), an input capacitor (Cin), an output capacitor (C2) and a voltage output (Vout, 42V). The converter employs tapped inductor instead of standard coil, permitting the duty cycle of the converter to be adjusted to a value at which the efficiency of the system is improved is to be used by different car and/truck makers.
In operation, the bi-direction converter may be used to step-up or step-down depending on operations of the switches S1 and S2. For step-up operations, the second switch S2 is always off and the duty cycle of the first switch S1 is regulated as described above with respect to the output-to-tap boost converter so as to boost voltage according the transfer ratio described above. For step-down operations, the first switch S1 is always off and the duty cycle of the second switch S2 is regulated as described above with respect to the rail-to-tap buck convert so as to buck voltage according to the transfer ratio described above.
The new bi-directional 14/42 dc/dc converter is aimed to improve the performance of the classical and already exciting dual voltage converter by only substituting the standard coil by the tapped inductor. Integrating the tapped inductor instead of a classical inductor permits the setting of the duty cycle of the main transistor switch (S1 for buck and S2 for boos) to a desirable value at which the efficiency of the system is improved.
Economically, the substitution of the standard coil by the tapped inductor implies a slight cost increase which can be defrayed by a higher efficiency and so less heat dissipation through the device. The duty cycle of the buck and boost converters can now be set to a desirable value at which the efficiency of the system is improved thanks to the insertion of the winding ratio of the tapped-inductor into the transfer ratio and less heat is produced due to higher efficiency.
One advantage of the present invention relates to optionally reducing cost, weight, size, complexity and energy losses associated with the use of transformers in high conversion ratio dc-dc converters that does so without transformers and avoids cascading several dc-dc converters.
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale, some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for the claims and/or as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.