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Resonant Boost Converter Design Justin Burkhart April 15, 2009 Presentation Outline • • • • • Project Goals The Class E Inverter Resonant Rectifier LDMOS Device Model Completed Boost Converter Design Project Goals • Design a resonant boost converter using TI LBC5 process LDMOS devices • Targeted at automotive applications with: – 11-16 Vdc Input – 30 Vdc Output – 10-20 Watts – Highest possible switching frequency with efficiency >80% (if possible) The Class E Inverter Adjusted to deliver DC and AC power to the load Current (A) 1.5 0 • Assumed high enough Q such that io is sinusoidal • When the switch opens, circuit is designed such that the voltage V(t) rings back to zero D*T later thus providing a ZVS opportunity Voltage (Volts) • Switch is opened and closed periodically I 0.5 -0.5 0 • L1 is large choke with only DC current io(t) 1 10 20 30 Time (ns) 40 50 V(t) Vo(t) 40 20 0 0 10 20 30 Time (ns) 40 50 The Class E Inverter Adjusted to deliver DC and AC power to the load Current (A) 1.5 Cons • High peak device voltage • Large choke inductor • Sensitive to load changes • Limited minimum output power when C1 is constrained I 0.5 0 Voltage (Volts) -0.5 0 Pros • Zero Voltage Switching • Only one ground referenced switch required io(t) 1 10 20 30 Time (ns) 40 50 V(t) Vo(t) 40 20 0 0 10 20 30 Time (ns) 40 50 Resonant Input Inductor To see what happens when the value of L1 is reduced break it into two hypothetical inductors, one that carries only DC current and one that carries only AC current. In this configuration, L1-AC is in parallel with C1 This results with: • Faster Transient Response • Lower Minimum Output Power • Flexibility in choice of C1 Equivalent Load for Class E Inverter The load of the Class E Inverter Circuit is tuned to look inductive and can be modeled by an inductor and resistor This equivalent load provides for a simpler design procedure when the inverter will be used in a DC/DC converter Solve for component Values 1. Assume DC current in the input 3. Solve for the drain voltage by integrating current in the equivalent C1 2. Assume sinusoidal current in load 4. Solve for the fundamental Fourier component of drain voltage 5. Set drain voltage and slope of drain voltage to zero at switch turn on time 6. Solve for phase of the voltage and current fundamental components 7. Solve for circuit component values Resonant Rectifier To transform the Class E inverter into a DC/DC boost converter, the output of the inverter must be rectified A resonant rectifier is used since the losses incurred by a hard switched rectifier at high frequency are too high to maintain good efficiency The rectifier load is modeled as a constant voltage source since the complete DC/DC converter will use feedback to hold the output voltage constant Resonant Rectifier To maintain ZVS the rectifier must present the same impedance to the Class E Inverter as the L-R load network When designing the rectifier, the goal is to choose L and C such that rectifier will have the same current Io(t) as the L-R circuit. This will maintain ZVS in the inverter. Rectifier Operation Vdiode(t) • Diode turns off when Io(t) goes < 0 • Initial conditions are known, thus equations for Io(t) and Vdiode(t) can be derived • Using initial conditions, ton and toff must be solved for • Closed form solution is not easily arrived at since equations are nonlinear and very messy 40 20 0 -20 0 10 20 Time (ns) Vdiode(t) 30 40 10 20 Time (ns) I o(t) 30 40 10 20 Time (ns) 30 40 50 0 -50 0 Current (Amps) • Diode turns on when Vdiode(t) goes > Vout Voltage (Volts) Voltage (Volts) VAC+VDC 4 2 0 -2 0 Rectifier Equivalent Model Rectifier Model 1 Total Current: Solid Lines DC Current: Dashed Lines Model 2 Example Of Rectifier Tuning Tune Resonant Frequency 2 Goal: Fo • Adjust the characteristic impedance of the rectifier until the desired output power is reached 1 Current (Amps) • Adjust the resonant frequency of the rectifier until the input current has the desired phase Increase 1.5 0.5 0 -0.5 -1 0 Tune Characteristic Impedance 2 22 1.5 20 Power Output (Watts) Current (Amps) 10 15 20 Time (ns) 25 30 35 40 24 2.5 Decrease Zo 5 1 0.5 0 18 16 14 -0.5 12 -1 -1.5 0 5 10 15 20 Time (ns) 25 30 35 40 10 20 25 30 35 Characteristic Impedance (Ohms) 40 LDMOS Device Model Typical LDMOS Device Model Simplified LDMOS Device Model Parasitic capacitance measurement procedure Device Measurement Data Rds-on Data • Test Device only has 1 bond wire per device terminal • This is a limiting factor in measuring small parasitic device resistances • TI process engineers report that Rds-on for devices in this lot were measured at 165mOhm • This would result with an estimate of about 475mOhm bond wire resistance Device Measurement Results Coss Data 2.3 pF extra parasitic capacitance from measurement Ciss Data 1.45 pF extra parasitic capacitance from measurement Simulated DC/DC Converter Converter Efficiency Loss Breakdown by Component 24 86 22 85.5 20 85 18 84.5 16 84 14 83.5 12 11 12 13 14 15 Vin (Volts) 16 17 Efficiency (%) Power Out (Watts) Efficiency and Output Power 83 18 Gate Drive is Not Included Future Work • Device optimization • Parametric variance analysis • Gate driver • Power section prototype • Integrated controller design • Complete converter