The present application relates to electric power conversion, and more particularly to buck-boost converter circuits, methods and systems which can convert DC to DC, DC to AC, and AC-AC, and are suitable for applications including line power conditioners, battery chargers, hybrid vehicle power systems, solar power systems, motor drives, and utility power conversion.
Numerous techniques have been proposed for electronic conversion of electric power from one form into another. A technique in common commercial usage for operating three phase induction motors at variable frequency and voltage off of fixed frequency and voltage utility power is the AC-DC-AC technique of the input diode bridge, DC-link capacitor, and the output active switch bridge, under PWM control, is shown in
A number of difficulties exist with the standard drive, however. The input current, while nominally in phase with the input voltage, is typically drawn in pulses. These pulses cause increased electric losses in the entire electrical distribution system. The pulses also cause higher losses in the DC link capacitor. These losses reduce the efficiency of the drive, and also lessen the useful life of the DC link capacitor (commonly an Aluminum Electrolytic type), which has a limited life in an case. If the impedance of the source power is too low, the pulses may become so large as to be unmanageable, in which case it is necessary to add reactance in the input lines, which increases losses, size, cost, and weight of the drive. Also, the voltage available for the output section is reduced, which may lead to loss-producing harmonics or lower-than-design voltage on the output waveform when full power, full speed motor operation is called for.
Due to the fixed DC-link voltage, the output switches are typically operated with Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) to synthesize a quasi-sinusoidal current waveform into the motor, using the inductance of the motor to translate the high voltage switched waveform from the drive into a more sinusoidal shape for the current. While this does eliminate lower order harmonics, the resulting high frequency harmonics cause additional losses in the motor due to eddy current losses, additional IR (ohmic) heating, and dielectric losses. These losses significantly increase the nominal losses of the motor, which reduces energy efficiency, resulting in higher motor temperatures, which reduces the useful life of the motor, and/or reduces the power available from the motor. Additionally, due to transmission line effects, the motor may be subject to voltages double the nominal peak-to-peak line voltage, which reduces the life of the motor by degrading its insulation. The applied motor voltages are also not balanced relative to ground, and may have sudden deviations from such balance, which can result in current flow through the motor bearings for grounded motor frames, causing bearing damage and reduced motor life. The sudden voltage swings at the motor input also cause objectionable sound emissions from the motor.
The output switches used in this motor drive must be constructed for very fast operation and very high dV/dt in order to minimize losses during PWM switching. This requirement leads to selection of switches with drastically reduced carrier lifetimes and limited internal gain. This in turn decreases the conductance of each device, such that more silicon area is required for a given amount of current. Additionally, the switches must be constructed to provide current limiting in the event of output line faults, which imposes additional design compromises on the switches which further increase their cost and losses.
Another problem with the standard drive is that the DC link voltage must always be less than the average of the highest line-to-line input voltages, such that during periods of reduced input voltage (such as when other motors are started across-the-line), the DC link voltage is insufficient to drive the motor.
Yet another difficulty with the standard drive is its susceptibility to input voltage transients. Each of the input switches must be able to withstand the full, instantaneous, line-to-line input voltage, or at least the voltage after any input filters. Severe input transients, as may be caused by lightning strikes, may produce line-to-line voltages that exceed 2.3 times the normal peak line-to-line voltages, even with suitable input protection devices such as Metal Oxide Varistors. This requires that the switches be rated for accordingly high voltages (e.g. 1600 volts for a 460 VAC drive), which increases cost per ampere of drive.
The standard drive also cannot return power from the DC link to the input (regeneration), and therefore large braking resistors are required for an application m which the motor must be quickly stopped with a large inertial or gravitational load.
Modifications to the basic motor drive described above are available, as also shown in
AC-AC line conditioners are constructed in a similar fashion to the standard drive with input and output filters and an active front end, and also suffer from the above mentioned problems.
Other motor AC-AC converters are known, such as the Matrix Converter, Current Source Converter, or various resonant AC and DC link converters, but these either require fast switching devices and substantial input and/or output filters, or large, lossy, and expensive reactive components, or, as in the case of the Matrix Converter, are incapable of providing an output voltage equal to the input voltage.
The term “converter” is sometimes used to refer specifically to DC-to-DC converters, as distinct from DC-AC “inverters” and AC-AC. “cycloconverters.” However, in the present application. the word converter is used more generally, to refer to all of these types and more.
What is needed then is a converter technique which draws power from the utility lines with low harmonics and unit power factor, is capable of operating with full output voltage even with reduced input voltage, allows operations of its switches with low stress during turn-off and turn-on, is inherently immune to line faults, produces voltage and current output waveforms with low harmonics and no common mode offsets while accommodating all power factors over the full output frequency range, operates with high efficiency, and which does so at a reasonable cost in a compact, light-weight package.
DC-DC, DC-AC, and AC-AC Buck-Boost converters are shown in the patent and academic literature which have at least some of the aforementioned desirable attributes. The classic Buck-Boost converter operates the inductor with continuous current, and the inductor may have an input and output winding to form a transformer for isolation and/or voltage/current translation, in which case it is referred to as a Flyback Converter. There are many examples of this basic converter, all of which are necessarily hard switched and therefore do not have the soft-switched attribute, which leads to reduced converter efficiency and higher costs. An example of a hard switched 3 phase to 3 phase Buck-Boost converter is shown in
One proposed DC-AC Buck-Boost converter (in U.S. Pat. No. 5,903,448) incorporates a bi-directional conduction/blocking switch in its output section to accommodate four quadrant operation, with AC output and bi-directional power transfer. The input, however, cannot be AC, and it uses hard switching.
The present application discloses new approaches to power conversion. A link reactance is connected to switching bridges on both input and output sides, and driven into a full AC waveform.
In some preferred embodiments (but not necessarily in the link reactance is driven with a nonsinusoidal waveform, unlike resonant converters.
In some preferred embodiments (but not necessarily in all), capacitive reactances are used on both input and output sides.
In some preferred embodiments (but not necessarily in all), the switching bridges are constructed with bidirectional semiconductor devices, and operated in a soft-switched mode.
In some preferred embodiments (but not necessarily in all), the input switching bridge is operated to provide two drive phases, from different legs of a polyphase input, during each cycle of the link reactance. The output bridge is preferably operated analogously, to provide two output connection phases during each cycle of the reactance.
In some preferred embodiments (but not necessarily in all), the link reactance uses an inductor which is paralleled with a discrete capacitor, or which itself has a high parasitic capacitance.
The disclosed innovations, in various embodiments, provide one or more of at least the following advantages:
The disclosed inventions will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show important sample embodiments of the invention and which are incorporated in the specification hereof by reference. These drawings illustrate by way of example and not limitation.
a-2d show four alternative versions of the basic Bi-directional Conducting and Blocking Switch (BCBS).
a-12j show voltage and current waveforms on the inductor during a typical cycle while transferring power at full load from input to output, as occurs in
The numerous innovative teachings of the present application will be described with particular reference to presently preferred embodiments (by way of example, and not of limitation).
Contrast with Other Approaches
DC-DC Buck-Boost converters employing resonant techniques to achieve soft switching are also shown in the patent literature (examples are U.S. Pat. No. 4,616,300, issued Oct. 7, 1986; U.S. Pat. No. 6,404,654. issued Jun. 11, 2002). These are not capable of DC-AC or AC-AC operation, and are also limited in their DC-DC range, in that the output DC voltage must be target than some minimum in order to achieve zero voltage turn-on of the power switch. In contrast to this prior art, the inventions described below have no restrictions on the relative voltages between the input and output portals, and power transfer is bi-directional.
A “partial-resonant” 3 phase AC-AC Buck-Boost converter is described in Kim et al., “New Bilateral Zero Voltage Switching AC/AC Converter Using High Frequency Partial-resonant Link”, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, (IEEE 1990), and shown in
1) has significantly reduced utilization of the inductor/capacitor,
2) has higher per unit RMS current loading on the input/output capacitors,
3) has a lower operating frequency for a given turn-off condition which leads to larger, costlier, and less efficient I/O filtering,
4) cannot deliver or receive current to/from the output for sufficiently low output voltages and/or power factors,
5) and has no lower limit on the operating frequency as output power factor and/or output voltage approaches zero.
The lowered operating frequency can lead to destructive resonances with the required input filters. Input filters were not shown in this reference, but are normally required. As shown in
U.S. Pat. No. 7,057,905 shows a buck-boost power converter with bi-directional switches and a method of operating same. This is a conventional hard-switched buck-boost converter, in that it has no capacitance in parallel with the inductor and has only one power cycle per inductor cycle, except that the additional input switch capability allows it to operate with an inductor DC offset current in either direction, it may also apply both polarities to the inductor during a single power cycle to better control the operating frequency.
As compared with this invention, U.S. Pat. No. 7,057,905, operates with a DC bias current in the inductor, such that it cannot do two power cycles per inductor cycle as this invention can, and cannot therefore do soft switching. It is prohibited from doing so since, as shown in
The prior art of Buck-Boost resonant converters are not capable of operating, as this invention does, in the “Full Cycle” mode (described below), in which the inductor (or transformer) is operated with full alternating current, with no DC component in any windings. This mode of operation requires bi-directional (AC) switches, and produces two power transfers for each cycle of the inductor/capacitor, resulting in superior utilization of the inductor/capacitor and I/O filters, while also allowing current transfer at low output voltages or low power factors.
The shortcomings described above are not intended to be exhaustive, but rather among the many that tend to impair the effectiveness of previously known techniques for power conversion. Other noteworthy problems may also exist; however, those mentioned here are sufficient to demonstrate that methodologies appearing in the art have not been altogether satisfactory.
The shortcomings listed above are reduced or eliminated by the disclosed techniques. These techniques are applicable to a vast number of applications, including but not limited to all DC-DC, DC-AC, and AC-AC power conversions.
The present application discloses power converters which are generally of the Buck-Boost family, but which use capacitance, either parasitic alone or with added discrete device(s), in parallel with the Buck-Boost inductor to achieve low turn-off switching stresses (i.e. “soft switching”) on the semiconductor switches, allowing relatively slow and inexpensive switches to be used. In alternative disclosed embodiments, as discussed below, operation without such added capacitance is possible, at the expense of higher forward turn-off switching losses. The converter of
In
The embodiments described below are believed to be the first application of the Buck-Boost inductor in full Alternating Current (AC) mode, which is referred to herein as the “Full Cycle” mode and which results in two power transfers per inductor cycle. Buck-Boost converters, including those of the Ngo and Kim references cited above, have a DC bias in the inductor current, and only one power transfer per inductor cycle.
The disclosed inventions can also be used for DC-AC, AC-DC, AC-AC, or DC-DC conversion, with no limitation on the relative magnitudes of the voltages involved as long as the voltage rating of the switches is not exceeded. However, if the implementation is such that one portal is always a higher voltage than the other portal, then the switches connected to said higher portal need only be able to block voltage in one direction.
Full electrical isolation and/or greater voltage and current conversion may be achieved by using an inductor/transformer instead of the simple inductor. Note that the inductor/transformer will typically not have current in both sides at the same time, so its operation is more like a split inductor (as in a flyback converter) than like a simple transformer (as in a push-pull converter. Another significant difference between buck-boost and push-pull is that the push-pull output voltage is fixed as a multiple or fraction of the input voltage, as given by the turns ratio, while the buck-boost has no such limitation. Push-pull topologies are described at http://en.wikipedia.org/wikiPush-Pull_Converter, which (in its state as of the filing date) is hereby incorporated by reference. A push-pull is quite unlike a buck-boost or flyback converter, in that the transformer is not operated as an energy-transfer inductor. In a buck-boost or flyback, input current pumps energy into a magnetic field, which is then drained to drive output current; thus the input and output currents flow at different times.
Inductor/transformer leakage inductance is typically a significant concern of buck-boost designs. This is typically dealt with by minimizing the leakage, and sometimes by adding circuit elements to deal with it. By contrast, the inventions described below can tolerate large parasitic capacitance, and thus inductors or transformers with very close windings can be specified, to minimize the leakage inductance. The standard hard switched buck-boost cannot tolerate parasitic capacitance, which makes it very difficult to minimize the leakage inductance for those configurations.
The innovative converter circuits, in various embodiments are constructed of semiconductor switches, an inductor, advantageously a capacitor in parallel with the inductor, and input and output filter capacitances. A control means, controlling the input switches, first connects the inductor, initially at zero current, to the input voltage, which may be DC or the highest line-to-line voltage AC pair in a three phase input, except at startup, in which case a near zero-voltage line pair is used. The control then turns off those switches when the current reaches a point, determined by the control to result in the desired rate of power transfer. The current then circulates between the inductor and capacitor, which results in a relatively low rate of voltage increase, such that the switches are substantially off before the voltage across them has risen significantly, resulting in low turn-off losses.
With DC or single phase AC input, no further current is drawn from the input. With 3 phase AC input, the control will again connect the inductor to the input lines, but this time to the line-to-line pair which has a lower voltage then the first pair. Turn on is accomplished as the relevant switches transition from reverse to forward bias. After drawing the appropriate amount of charge (which may be zero if the control determines that no current is to be drawn from the pair, as for example that the pair is at zero volts and input unity power factor is desired), the relevant switches are again turned off. Under most conditions, the voltage on the inductor will then reverse (with relatively low rates of voltage change due to the parallel capacitance). With 3 phase AC output, the control will turn on switches to allow current to flow from the inductor to the lowest voltage pair of lines which need current, after the relevant switches become forward biased, with the control turning off the switches after the appropriate amount of charge has been transferred. The inductor voltage then ramps up to the highest output line-to-line pair for 3 phase AC, or to the output voltage for single phase AC or DC. Again, switches are turned on to transfer energy (charge) to the output, transitioning from reverse to forward bias as the voltage ramps up. If the output voltage is larger then the highest input voltage, the current is allowed to drop to zero, which turns off the switch with a low rate of current reduction, which allows for the use of relatively slow reverse recovery characteristics. If the output voltage is less then the highest input voltage, the switches are turned off before current stops, so that the inductor voltage ramps up to the input voltage, such that zero-voltage turn on is maintained. Alternatively, the switches may be turned off before the point cited in the previous sentence, so as to limit the amount of current into the output. In this case, the excess energy due to current in the inductor is directed back into the input by turning on switches to direct current flow from the inductor into either e highest voltage pair in three phase, or the single phase AC or DC input.
In a three phase AC converter, the relative charge per cycle allocated to each input and output line pair is controlled to match the relative current levels on each line (phase). After the above scenario, when zero current is reached the inductor is reconnected to the input, but with a polarity reversed from the first connection, using switches that are complimentary to the switches used in the first half of the cycle. This connection can occur immediately after zero current (or shortly after zero current if the input voltage is less than the output voltage, to allow the capacitor voltage time to ramp back down), giving full utilization of the power transfer capability of the inductor. No resonant reversal is required as in the time period M4 of the Kim converter shown in
The disclosed embodiments are inherently capable of regeneration at any condition of output voltage, power factor, or frequency so in. motor drive or wind power applications, the motor may act as a generator, returning power to the utility lines.
In an AC motor drive implementation, input and output filtering may be as little as line-to-neutral connected capacitors. Since switching losses are very low due to soft switching, the Buck-Boost inductor can be operated at a high inductor frequency (typically 5 to 20 kHz for low voltage drives), allowing for a single, relatively small, and low loss, magnetic device. The current pulse frequency is twice the inductor frequency. This high frequency also allows the input and output filter capacitors to be relatively small with low, high frequency ripple voltage, which in turns allows for small, low loss line reactors.
Input voltage “sags”, as are common when other motors are connected across the line, are accommodated by temporarily drawing more current from the input to maintain a constant power draw and output voltage, utilizing the boost capability of this invention, avoiding expensive shutdowns or even loss of toque to the application.
The full filter between the converter and an attached voltage source (utility) or sink (motor, another utility, or load) includes the line capacitance (line-to-line or line-to-neutral, as in Y or Delta), and a series line inductance (or hue reactor as it's generally called). When driving a motor, the line reactance is just the inductance of the motor. I show this L-C filter in my preferred embodiments, and also mentioned it in my earlier claims. So it is a power filter, AND it does important conditioning for the converter.
The preferred converter benefits from having very low impedence voltage sources and sinks at the inputs and outputs. (This is a significant difference from the converter of
The line capacitance itself does not have to be really any particular value, but for proper operation the change in voltage on the line capacitance while charging or discharging the link inductance should only be a small fraction of the initial voltage, let's say less than 10%. There are other restraints as well For a 20 hp, 460 VAC prototype, 80 microF of line-to-neutral capacitance results in only a 1 to 2% ripple voltage. (This large capacitance was chosen in order to get the ripple current within the capacitor's current rating.) Capacitors could be made with lower uF for the same current rating, resulting in smaller, cheaper capacitors, and higher voltage ripple, but this is all that is available right now.
Another important consider is the resonant frequency formed by the LC of the line reactance and the line capacitance (the I/O power filter). This frequency must be lower than the link power cycle frequency in order to not have that filter resonant with the voltage ripple on the line capacitance. For my 20 hp 460 VAC prototype, the link frequency is 10 kHz, so the link power cycle frequency is 20 kHz (2 power cycles per link voltage cycle), and the resonant frequency of the L-C I/O is lower than 2 kHz, so that works well.
So, to summarize, the capacitance needs to be large enough to reasonably stabilize the I/O voltage to allow the link inductor charge/discharge to occur properly, and the L-C resonant frequency needs to be less than twice the link voltage frequency, and generally at least 4 to 10 times lower.
It should also be noted that too much capacitance on line filter can lead to excess reactive power on the utility connection.
Referring initially to
Referring to
Most of these switch combinations contain two independently controlled gates, as shown with all the switches for
The converter 100 also has input and output capacitor filters 130 and 131, respectively, which smooth the current pulses produced by switching current into and out of inductor 120. Optionally, a line reactor 132 may be added to the input to isolate the voltage ripple on input capacitor filter 131 from the utility and other equipment that may be attached to the utility lines. Similarly, another line reactor, not shown, may be used on the output if required by the application.
For illustration purposes, assume that power is to be transferred in a full cycle of the inductor/capacitor from the first to the second portal, as is illustrated in
To continue with the cycle, as shown as Mode 2
Note that TWO power cycles occur during each link reactance cycle: with reference to
As shown in
In general, when the controller 1500 deems it necessary, each switch is enabled, as is known in the art, by raising the voltage of the gate 204 (
In
By contrast, note that the prior art structure of
The Kim converter cannot return this excessive inductor energy back to the input, as this requires bidirectional switches. Thus the Kim converter must wait until the inductor energy drops to a sufficiently low value, with the result that the link reactance frequency drops to a very low value as the output voltage approaches zero. This in turn can cause resonances with input and/or output filters. With zero voltage output, the Kim converter cannot function at all.
Note that the modes cited in Kim et al. differ somewhat from the modes cited here. This is due to two reasons. The first is that, for brevity, the “capacitor ramping”, or “partial resonant” periods in this invention are not all numbered, as there are 8 of those periods. As indicated in
Control algorithms may use this ability of recycling inductor energy to advantage in order to control current transfers, as is required by many converter control algorithms for vector or volts/Hz control. One such possible algorithm is explained in
For the single phase AC and DC operation of
As may be surmised by those skilled in the art, the current resulting from the above described operation of the converter is in many applications, controlled by controller 1500 to result in a sinusoidal varying current from the input, normally in phase with the input voltage so as to produce a unity power factor on the input, and sinusoidally varying voltage and current on the motor, so as to operate the motor at the highest possible efficiency and/or performance.
In those cases where the motor is acting as a generator, as may occur when the frequency applied to the motor via the converter is rapidly decreased, the above described operating cycle is reversed, with current being drawn from the motor phases and injected into the input phases.
In general, the input and output frequencies are substantially less than the frequency at which the link reactance is operated. For 60 Hz input, a typical operating frequency of the link reactance may be 10 kHz for low voltage (230 to 690 VAC) drives and converters, and 15 kHz for medium voltage (2300 on up) drives and converters, with current pulse frequencies twice those frequencies, or higher if multiple, synchronized power in are used, as shown in
The motor drive of
Another embodiment of this invention is shown in
In the embodiments of this invention shown in
In the power converter of
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance; a first bridge switch array comprising at least two bidirectional switching devices which are jointly connected to operatively connect at least one terminal of said reactance to a power input, with reversible polarity of connection; a second bridge switch array comprising at least two bidirectional switching devices which are jointly connected to operatively connect at least one terminal of said reactance to a power output, with reversible polarity of connection; wherein said first switch array drives said reactance with a nonsinusoidal voltage waveform.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance; first and second power portals, each with two or more ports by which electrical power is input from or output to said portals; first and second half-bridge switch arrays interposed between said reactance acid a respective one of said portals, and each comprising one bidirectional switching device for each said port of each said power portal; wherein said switch arrays are each operatively connected to respective ones of said portals.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Full-Bridge Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: first and second full bridge switch arrays, each comprising at least four bidirectional switching devices; a substantially parallel inductor-capacitor combination symmetrically connected to be driven separately by, either said switch array; one of said switch arrays being operatively connected to a power input, and the other thereof being operatively connected to supply a power output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: first and second switch arrays, each comprising at least two bidirectional switching devices; a substantially parallel inductor-capacitor combination connected to each said switch array; wherein a first one of said switch arrays is operatively connected to a power input, and is operated to drive power into said inductor-capacitor combination with a non-sinusoidal waveform; and wherein a second one of said switch arrays is operated to extract power from said inductor-capacitor combination to an output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: first and second switch arrays, each comprising at least two bidirectional switching devices; an energy-transfer reactance connected to each said switch array; wherein a first one of said switch arrays is connected through respective capacitive reactances to a polyphase power input, and operated to drive power into said reactance from multiple different legs of said power input in succession with a non-sinusoidal waveform; and wherein a second one of said switch arrays is operated to extract power from said reactance to an output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A power converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor; an input switch array configured to drive AC current through said reactance; and an output network connected to extract energy from said reactance; wherein said input switch array performs at least two drive operations, in the same direction but from different sources, during a single half-cycle of said reactance.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A power converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor, and operating at a primary AC magnetic field frequency which is less than half of the reactance's resonant frequency; an input switch array configured to drive AC current through said reactance; and an output network switch array connected to extract energy from said reactance; wherein said input switch array performs at least two drive operations, in the same direction but from different sources, during a single half-cycle of said reactance.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A power converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor, and operating at a primary AC magnetic field frequency which is less than half of the reactance's resonant frequency; an input switch array configured to drive current through said reactance; and an output switch array to extract energy from said reactance; wherein said input switch array performs at least two different drive operations at different times during a single cycle of said reactance, and wherein said output switch array performs at least two different drive operations at different times during a single cycle of said reactance.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor; an input switch array configured to drive AC current, with no average DC current, through said reactance; and an output network connected to extract energy from said reactance.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: an energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor; a plurality of input switch arrays, each said array configured to drive AC current, with no average DC current, through said reactance; and a plurality of output switch arrays, each connected to extract energy from said reactance; said arrays having no more than two switches driving or extracting energy from said reactance at any given time; wherein said input switch arrays individually drive said reactance with a nonsinusoidal voltage waveform.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A power conversion circuit, comprising an input stage which repeatedly, at various times, drives current into the parallel combination of an inductor and a capacitor, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnects said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; wherein said action of driving current is performed in opposite senses and various times, and wherein said disconnecting operation is performed substantially identically for both directions of said step of driving current; and an output stage which extracts energy from said parallel combination, to thereby perform power conversion.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A power conversion circuit, comprising: an input stage which repeatedly drives current into the parallel combination of an inductor and a capacitor, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnects said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; wherein said input stage drives current in different senses at different times; and an output stage which repeatedly couples power out of said parallel combination, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnects said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; wherein said output stage couples power out of said combination during two opposite directions of current therein; wherein said input and output stages both disconnect said parallel combination substantially identically for both directions of current in said combination.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Soft Switched Universal Full-Bridge Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: an inductor with a first and second port; a capacitor attached in parallel with said inductor; connections to a plurality of voltage sources or sinks (portals) of electric power each with a plurality of ports; a first set of electronic bi-directional switches that comprise said connections between said first port of the inductor and each said port of each said portal, with one said switch between the first port of the inductor and each port of each portal; a second set of electronic bi-directional switches that comprise said connections between said second port of the inductor and each port of each portal, with one switch between the second port of the inductor and each port of each portal; capacitive filtering means connected between each said port within each said portal; control means to coordinate said switches to connect said inductor to port pairs on each portal, with no more than two switches enabled at any given time; said control means further coordinating said switches to first store electrical energy in the inductor by enabling two switches on a given input portal to connect the inductor to said input portal, then disabling the switches after the proper amount of energy has been stored in the inductor; and said control means may enable further pairs of switches on the same or other input portals so as to further energize the inductor, and disable said switches after the appropriate inductor energizing is complete; said control means further enables another pair of switches on another, output, portal to transfer sonic or all, of the inductor energy into said output portal, and then disables said switches after the desired amount of charge has been transferred to said portal; said control means may enable further pairs of switches on the same or other output portals so as to further send charge into said output portals, and disable said switches after the desired amount of charge has been transferred to said portal; and if the inductor has excess energy after discharging into the last output portal, said control means then enables an appropriate switch pair to direct said excess energy back into the input portal; wherein said control means may modify the above sequence so as to achieve any required energy transfer among the ports and portals; said inductor magnetically storing electrical energy in the form of electric current, using said switches; energy transfer from one or more input portals to said inductor occurring, via current flow through two or more said ports of one or more said portals, with only one pair of ports; and cyclically repeating said energy and charge transfers.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Soft-switched Half-Bridge Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: first and second power portals, each with two or more ports by which electrical power is input from or output to said portals, first and second half-bridge switch arras, each comprising one bidirectional switching device for each said port of each said power portal, an energy-transfer link reactance with one port connected to both said switch arrays, and with the other port connected to an actual or virtual ground, such that said actual or virtual ground maintains at a relatively constant voltage, each of said switch arrays being connected to a power portal with said portal possessing capacitive reactance between the legs of said portals configured so as to approximate a voltage source, with power transfer occurring between said portals via said energy-transfer reactance, said link energy-transfer reactance consisting of an link inductor and capacitance in parallel, said power transfer being accomplished in a first power cycle as one or more pairs of input portal legs are singularly or sequentially connected to said energy-transfer reactance to store energy via increased current flow and inductance into said link inductor, followed by one or more pairs of output portal legs singularly or sequentially connected to said energy-transfer reactance to remove energy via decreased current flow and inductance from said link inductor, with any excess energy in said link inductor subsequently returned back to one or more said input portal leg pairs, followed by a reversal of current within said link inductor and a repeat of the heretofore described energy transfer, to constitute a second power cycle, from input to output portal leg pairs, but with opposite but equal current flow in said link inductor and utilizing switches of said switch arrays which are complimentary to said switches used for said first cycle of said power transfer; said first and second power cycles comprising a single voltage cycle of the energy-transfer link reactance; said capacitance, in conjunction with said current reversal, producing soft-switching of said switches with low-voltage turn-off, zero voltage turn-on, and low reverse recovery losses; said bidirectional switching devices being capable of blocking voltage in either direction and conducting current in either direction; wherein said power transfer cycles are continuously repeated by said control means to produce said power transfer on a continuing basis; and wherein control means coordinate said switching actions to produce current and power transfer via said power cycles as required to produce desired output voltage and current, as may be used to drive single or polyphase motors at variable speed and voltage, or to drive any other electrical DC, single phase AC, polyphase AC, and/or multiple DC loads; said capacitance, in conjunction with said current reversal, producing soft-off-switching of said switches with low-voltage turn-off, as current is shunted from each turning-off switch into said substantially parallel capacitance, said switches having soft turn-on as diodes as the link reactance voltage causes control means enabled switches to transition from reverse to forward bias, said switches having soft reverse blocking turn-off as the link inductor current linearly decreases to zero after discharging into an output port.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Soft-switched Full-Bridge Buck-Boost Converter, comprising: first and second power portals, each with two or more ports by which electrical power is input from or output to said portals, first and second fill-bridge switch arrays, each comprising two bidirectional switching devices for each said port of each said power portal, a energy-transfer link reactance symmetrically connected to both said switch arrays, each of said switch arrays being connected to a power portal with said portal possessing capacitive reactance between the legs of said portals configured so as to approximate a voltage source, with power transfer between said portals via said energy-transfer reactance, Said link energy-transfer reactance consisting of an link inductor and capacitance in parallel, said power transfer being accomplished in a first power cycle as one or more pairs of input portal legs are singularly or sequentially connected to said energy-transfer reactance to store energy via increased current flow and inductance into said link inductor, followed by one or more pairs of output portal legs singularly or sequentially connected to said energy-transfer reactance to remove energy via decreased current flow and inductance from said link inductor, with any excess energy in said link inductor subsequently returned back to one or more said input portal leg pairs, followed by a reversal of current within said link inductor and a repeat of the heretofore described energy transfer, to constitute a second power cycle, from input to output portal leg pairs, but with opposite but equal current flow in said link inductor and utilizing switches of said switch arrays which are complimentary to said switches used for said first cycle of said power transfer; Said first and second power cycles comprise a single voltage cycle of the energy-transfer link reactance; Said bidirectional switching devices being capable of blocking voltage in either direction and conducting current in either direction; Said power transfer cycles being continuously repeated by said control means to produce said power transfer on a continuing basis; Said control means coordinating said switching actions to produce current and power transfer via said power cycles as required to produce desired output voltage and current, as may be used to drive single or polyphase motors at variable speed and voltage, or to drive any other electrical DC, single phase AC, polyphase AC, and/or multiple DC loads; Said capacitance, in conjunction with said current reversal, producing soft-off-switching of said switches with low-voltage turn-off, as current is shunted from each turning-off switch into said substantially parallel capacitance; Said switches having soft turn-on as diodes as the link reactance voltage causes control means enabled switches to transition from reverse to forward bias; Said switches having soft reverse blocking turn-off as the link inductor current linearly decreases to zero after discharging into an output port.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: An electric, vehicle, comprising at least one motor, at least one electrical energy storage device, and a power converter as above.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A. solar energy system comprising at least one photovoltaic array, at least one electrical energy storage device, and a power converter as above.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A motor system comprising a polyphase power line connection, a polyphase motor, and a power converter as above connected therebetween as a variable-frequency drive.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A multiple power module soft-switched converter, comprising multiple converters as above connected in parallel between an input portal and an output portal, and commonly controlled to minimize harmonics in the current drawn from and delivered to said input and output portals.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A composite of n converters as above, connected at least partially in parallel, and operating at inductor phase angles separated by 180/n degrees; whereby the amount of input output filtering can be reduced.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for operating a Buck-Boost Converter, comprising the actions of: (a) operating a first bridge switch array, comprising bidirectional switching devices, to operatively connect at least one terminal of a reactance to a power input, with polarity which reverses at different times; (b) operating a second bridge switch array, comprising bidirectional switching devices, to operatively connect at least one terminal of said reactance to a power output, with polarity which reverses at different times; wherein said actions (a) and (b) are never performed simultaneously.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for operating a Buck-Boost Converter, comprising the actions of: operating a first bridge switch array, comprising bidirectional switching devices, to operatively connect at least one terminal of a substantially parallel inductor-capacitor combination to a power input, with polarity which reverses at different times; wherein said first switch array is operatively connected to a power input, and is operated to drive power into said inductor-capacitor combination with a non-sinusoidal waveform; and operating a second one of said switch arrays to extract power from said inductor-capacitor combination to an output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for operating a power converter, comprising the actions of: driving an energy-transfer reactance with a full AC waveform, at a base frequency which is less than half the resonant frequency of said reactance; coupling power into said reactance, on each cycle thereof, with two different drive phases, respectively supplied from two different legs of a polyphase power source; and coupling power out of said reactance, on each cycle thereof, with two different connection phases, respectively driving two different legs of a polyphase power output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for power conversion, comprising the actions of: driving, an energy-transfer reactance with a full AC waveform, at a base frequency which is less than half the resonant frequency of said reactance; coupling power into said reactance, on each cycle thereof, with two different drive phases, respectively supplied from two different legs of a polyphase power source; and extracting power from said reactance to an output.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A Buck-Boost power conversion method, comprising: operating an input switch array configured to drive AC current through an energy-transfer reactance, at an average current magnitude which is more than 100 times as great as the average DC current within said reactance; said energy-transfer reactance comprising at least one inductor; and operating an output network to extract energy from said reactance.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for operating a power conversion circuit, comprising the steps of repeatedly, at various times: driving current into the parallel combination of an inductor and a capacitor, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnecting said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; wherein said action of driving current is performed in opposite senses and various times, and wherein said disconnecting operation is performed substantially identically for both directions of said step of driving current; and extracting energy from said parallel combination, to thereby perform power conversion.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: A method for operating a power conversion circuit, comprising the steps of repeatedly, at various times: a) driving current into the parallel combination of an inductor and a capacitor, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnecting said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; b) coupling power out of said parallel combination, and immediately thereafter temporarily disconnecting said parallel combination from external connections, to thereby transfer some energy from said inductor to said capacitor; wherein said disconnecting operation, in said step a, is performed substantially identically for both directions of said step of driving current; and wherein said disconnecting operation, in said step b, is performed substantially identically for both directions of said step of driving current.
According to various disclosed embodiments, there is provided: Methods and systems for transforming electric power between two or more portals. Any or all portals can be DC, single phase AC, or multi-phase AC. Conversion is accomplished by a plurality of bi-directional conducting and blocking semiconductor switches which alternately connect an inductor and parallel capacitor between said portals, such that energy is transferred into the inductor from one or more input portals and/or phases, then the energy is transferred out of the inductor to one or more output portals and/or phases, with said parallel capacitor facilitating “soft” turn-off, and with any excess inductor energy being returned back to the input. Soft turn-on and reverse recovery is also facilitated. Said bi-directional switches allow for two power transfers per inductor/capacitor cycle, thereby maximizing inductor/capacitor utilization as well as providing for optimum converter operation with high input/output voltage ratios. Control means coordinate the switches to accomplish the desired power transfers.
As will be recognized by those skilled in the art, the innovative concepts described in the present application can be modified and varied over a tremendous range of applications, and accordingly the scope of patented subject matter is not limited by any of the specific exemplary teachings given. It is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and broad scope of the appended claims.
While the proceeding Figures illustrate exemplary embodiments of a converter. Buck-Boost converter and methods of operation therefore, other circuits (including variations of the foregoing circuits) and methods of operation therefore are well within the broad scope of the present invention. For a better understanding of power electronics including Buck-Boost converter technologies, see Principles of Power Electronics, by Kassakian, M. Schlecht, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company (1991). The aforementioned reference is herein incorporated by reference.
The disclosed converter circuits are advantageously applicable to a wide variety of systems, including for example:
Additional general background, which helps to show variations and implementations, may be found in the following publications, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference:
None of the description in the present application should be read as implying that any particular element, step, or function is an essential element which must be included in the claim scope: THE SCOPE OF PATENTED SUBJECT MATTER IS DEFINED ONLY BY THE ALLOWED CLAIMS. Moreover, none of these claims are intended to invoke paragraph six of 35 USC section 112 unless the exact words “means for” are followed by a participle.
The claims as filed are intended to be as comprehensive as possible, and NO subject matter is intentionally relinquished, dedicated, or abandoned.
Priority is claimed from U.S. provisional application 60/811,191 filed Jun. 6, 2006, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60811191 | Jun 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12479207 | Jun 2009 | US |
Child | 13205243 | US | |
Parent | 11759006 | Jun 2007 | US |
Child | 12479207 | US |