1 - 1 - Introduction To Power Processing: Fig. 1.1. The Switching Converter, A Basic Power Processing Block
1 - 1 - Introduction To Power Processing: Fig. 1.1. The Switching Converter, A Basic Power Processing Block
Introduction
and a power output port. The raw input power Fig. 1.1. The switching converter, a basic
power processing block.
is processed as specified by the control input,
yielding the conditioned output power. One of several basic functions can be performed. In
a dc-dc converter, the dc input voltage is converted to a dc output voltage having a larger or
smaller magnitude, possibly with opposite polarity or with isolation of the input and output
ground references. In an ac-dc rectifier, an ac input voltage is rectified, producing a dc
output voltage. The dc output voltage and/or ac input current waveform may be controlled.
The inverse process, dc-ac inversion, involves transforming a dc input voltage into an ac
output voltage of controllable magnitude and frequency. Ac-ac cycloconversion involves
converting an ac input voltage to a given ac output voltage of controllable magnitude and
frequency.
Control is invariably required. It is Power Switching Power
input converter output
nearly always desired to produce a well-
regulated output voltage, in the presence of
Control
variations in the input voltage and load current. input
1
High efficiency is essential in any power
η
processing application. The primary reason for
0.8
this is usually not the desire to save money on
one’s electric bills, nor to conserve energy, in
0.6
spite of the nobility of such pursuits. Rather,
high efficiency converters are necessary because
0.4
construction of low-efficiency converters,
producing substantial output power, is
impractical. The efficiency of a converter having 0.2
0 0.5 1 1.5
output power Pout and input power Pin is Ploss / Pout
Pout
η= Fig. 1.3. Converter power loss vs. efficiency.
Pin (1-1)
The power lost in the converter is
1 –1
Ploss = Pin – Pout = Pout η
(1-2)
Equation (1-2) is plotted in Fig. 1.3. In a converter that has an efficiency of 50%, power
Ploss is dissipated by the converter elements which is equal to the output power Pout. This
power is converted into heat, which must be removed from the converter. If the output
power is substantial, then so is the loss power. This leads to a large and expensive cooling
system, it causes the electronic elements within the converter to operate at high temperature,
and it reduces the system reliability. Indeed, at high output powers, it may be impossible to
adequately cool the converter elements using current technology.
Increasing the efficiency is the key to obtaining higher output powers. For example,
if the converter efficiency is 90%, then the converter loss power is equal to only 11% of the
output power. Efficiency is a good measure of the success of a given converter technology.
Figure 1.4 illustrates a converter which process a large amount of power, with very high
efficiency. Since very little power is lost, the converter elements can be packaged with high
density, leading to a converter of small size and weight, and of low temperature rise.
How can we build a
circuit which changes the
voltage, yet dissipates
Pin Pout
negligible power? The various Converter
2
Chapter 1. Introduction
+
–
elements, magnetic devices
including inductors and DTs Ts
linear-
transformers, semiconductor mode switched-mode
Resistors Capacitors Magnetics Semiconductor devices
devices operated in the linear
mode (for example, as class A or Fig. 1.5. Devices available to the circuit designer [2].
Introductory circuits
textbooks describe a low-efficiency method to perform the required function: the voltage
divider circuit illustrated in Fig. 1.7(a). The dc-dc converter then consists simply of a
variable resistor, whose value is adjusted such that the required output voltage is obtained.
The load current flows through the variable resistor. For the specified voltage and current
levels, the power Ploss dissipated in the variable resistor equals the load power Pout = 500W.
The source Vg supplies power Pin = 1000W. Figure 1.7(b) illustrates a more practical
implementation known as the linear series-pass regulator. The variable resistor of Fig.
3
Chapter 1. Introduction
switched-mode semiconductor – –
4
Chapter 1. Introduction
s v (t)
Thus, the switch changes the dc voltage, by a Vg
introduction of a single-section L- Fig. 1.10. Addition of L-C low-pass filter, for removal
of switching harmonics.
C low-pass filter. If the filter
corner frequency f0 is sufficiently less than the switching frequency f s , then the filter
essentially passes only the dc component of vs(t). To the extent that the switch, inductor,
and capacitor elements are ideal, the efficiency of this dc-dc converter can approach 100%.
In Fig. 1.11, a control system is introduced for regulation of the output voltage.
Since the output voltage is a Power Switching converter Load
input
function of the switch duty cycle, a +
i
control system can be constructed
v + v
which varies the duty cycle to g –
sensor
– H(s) gain
cause the output voltage to follow a
given reference. Figure 1.11 also transistor error
gate driver signal
illustrates a typical way in which δ pulse-width vc G (s) ve –+ Hv
δ(t) modulator c
devices. The converter power stage Fig. 1.11. Addition of control system to regulate the
output voltage.
developed in Figs. 1.8 - 1.11 is
5
Chapter 1. Introduction
using a converter containing switching Fig. 1.12. The boost converter: (a) ideal
converter circuit, (b) output voltage V vs.
devices embedded within a network of transistor duty cycle D.
reactive elements.
Figure 1.13(a) illustrates a simple dc-1øac inverter circuit. As illustrated in Fig.
1.13(b), the switch duty cycle is modulated sinusoidally. This causes the switch output
voltage vs(t) to contain a low-frequency sinusoidal component. The L-C filter cutoff
frequency f0 is selected to pass
a)
the desired low-frequency
components of vs(t), but to vs(t)
1 + – 2
attenuate the high-frequency Vg +
– + v(t) –
2 1
switching harmonics. The load
controller modulates the duty
cycle such that the desired b)
v (t)
output frequency and voltage s
magnitude are obtained.
6
Chapter 1. Introduction
low voltages, such as 3.3V and 5V, Fig. 1.14. A computer power supply system.
required by the computer integrated
circuits. The switching converter provides regulated output voltages of the proper
magnitude, and dc isolation. The converter switching frequency is typically in the vicinity
of 100kHz; use of a high switching frequency leads to substantial reductions in transformer
size and weight. The rectifier may also be a high-frequency switching converter, whose
input current waveform is controlled to present an effective resistive load to the ac power
system. In a distributed power system, the dc-dc converter produces an intermediate
voltage such as 42V, which appears at the computer backplane. Each card contains high-
density dc-dc converters which produce locally-regulated low voltages. Commercial
applications of power electronics include off-line power supplies of computers, office
equipment, and
Dissipative
laboratory equipment, shunt regulator
uninterruptable ac power +
Solar
supplies, and electronic array vbus
–
ballasts for fluorescent
lighting. Battery
charge/discharge
Dc-dc
converter
Dc-dc
converter
controllers
Figure 1.15
illustrates a power Batteries
Payload Payload
system of an earth-
orbiting spacecraft. A Fig. 1.15. Power system of an earth-orbiting spacecraft.
7
Chapter 1. Introduction
variable-frequency
+ variable-voltage ac
solar array produces the main power bus voltage Vbus. Dc-dc converters convert Vbus to the
regulated voltages required by the spacecraft payloads. Battery charge/discharge controllers
interface the main power bus to batteries; these controllers may also contain dc-dc
converters. Aerospace applications of power electronics include the power systems of
aircraft, spacecraft, and other aerospace vehicles.
Figure 1.16 illustrates a variable-speed ac motor drive system. The speed of the ac
motor is controlled by variation of its electrical input frequency. The voltage magnitude
must be varied, as well. The 50Hz or 60Hz ac input voltage is rectified, to produce the dc
link voltage Vlink. An inverter then produces three-phase ac output voltages of controllable
frequency and controllable magnitude. This system allows accurate control of the ac
machine, as well as inrush current limiting. Applications of motor drives includes speed
control of industrial processes, such as control of compressors, fans and pumps,
transportation applications such as electric vehicles, subways, and locomotives, and motion
control applications in areas such as computer peripherals and industrial robots.
Power electronics also finds application in other diverse industries, including dc
power supplies, uninterruptable power supplies, and battery chargers for the
telecommunications industry, inverter systems for renewable energy generation
applications such as wind and photovoltaic power, and utility power systems applications
including high-voltage dc transmission and static VAR compensators.
8
Chapter 1. Introduction
Thus, the practice of power electronics requires a broad electrical engineering background.
In addition, there are fundamental concepts which are unique to the power electronics field,
and which require specialized study.
The presence of high-frequency switching makes the understanding of switched-
mode converters not straightforward. Hence, converter modeling is central to the study of
power electronics. As introduced in Eq. (1-3), the dc component of a periodic waveform is
equal to its average value. This ideal can be generalized, to predict the dc components of all
converter waveforms via averaging. In part I of this book, averaged equivalent circuit
models of converters operating in steady state are derived. These models not only predict
the basic ideal behavior of switched-mode converters, but also model efficiency and losses.
Realization of the switching elements, using power semiconductor devices, is also
discussed.
Design of the converter control system requires models of the converter dynamics.
In part II of this book, the averaging technique is extended, to describe low-frequency
variations in the converter waveforms. Small-signal equivalent circuit models are
developed, which predict the control-to-output and line-to-transfer functions, as well as
other ac quantities of interest. These models are then employed, to design converter control
systems and to understand the well-known current-programmed control technique.
The magnetic elements are key components of any switching converter. The design
of high-power high-frequency magnetic devices having high efficiency and small size and
weight is central to most converter technologies. High frequency power magnetics design
is discussed in part III.
Pollution of the ac power system by rectifier harmonics is a growing problem. As a
result, many converter systems now incorporate low-harmonic rectifiers, which draw
sinusoidal currents from the utility system. These modern rectifiers are considerably more
sophisticated than the conventional diode bridge: they may contain high-frequency
switched-mode converters, with control systems that regulate the ac line current waveform.
Modern rectifier technology is treated in part IV.
Resonant converters employ quasi-sinusoidal waveforms, as opposed to the
rectangular waveforms of the buck converter illustrated in Fig. 1.9. These resonant
converters find application where high-frequency inverters and converters are needed.
Resonant converters are modeled in part V. Their loss mechanisms, including the processes
of zero-voltage switching and zero-current switching, are discussed.
9
Chapter 1. Introduction
REFERENCES
[1] W. E. Newell, “Power Electronics —Emerging from Limbo,” IEEE Power Electronics Specialists
Conference, 1973 Record, pp. 6-12.
[4] Slobodan Cuk, “Basics of Switched-Mode Power Conversion: Topologies, Magnetics, and
Control,” in Advances in Switched-Mode Power Conversion, vol. 2, pp. 279--310, Irvine:
Teslaco, 1981.
[5] N. Mohan, “Power Electronics Circuits: An Overview,” IEEE IECON, 1988 Proceedings, pp.
522-527.
[6] B. K. Bose, “Power Electronics —A Technology Review,” Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 80, no.
8, August 1992, pp. 1303-1334.
[7] M. Nishihara, “Power Electronics Diversity,” International Power Electronics Conference (Tokyo),
1990 Proceedings, pp. 21-28.
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