In this section, the working principles of the LLC resonant converter when applying hybrid PSM and PFM are discussed, and the soft-switching performance characteristic is inferred. Part A introduces several definitions of the terms relating to the LLC resonant converter and its fundamental harmonic approximation (FHA) analysis results. Part B shows four main operation modes and their soft-switching performance characteristic.
2.1. Definition and FHA Analysis of LLC Resonant Converter
The LLC resonant converter is shown in
Figure 1. It is mainly composed of a DC input
Vin, an input filtering capacitor
Cin, a full-bridge inverter, a resonant tank, a high-frequency transformer
T1, a full-bridge rectifier, a large output-filter capacitor
Cout and load
Ro. The full-bridge inverter consists of four power switches
Q1–
Q4, and
D1–
D4 and
C1–
C4 are the parasitic diode and capacitor of the power switches, separately. The resonant tank consists of resonant inductor
Lr, resonant capacitor
Cr and magnetic inductor
Lm.
VAB is the output voltage of the inverter bridge,
iLr is the resonant current,
vCr is the voltage on
Cr,
im is the magnetizing current of
Lm,
irect is the rectified current, which is composed of the difference between
iLr and
im,
io is the load current,
Vo is the DC output voltage, and
fr is the resonant frequency which is defined in (1).
Q1–Q4 are all turned on with a 50% duty cycle, and Q1 is complementary to Q2, while Q3 is complementary to Q4. By adjusting the switching frequency, the impedance of the resonant tank is changed, and the output is regulated by PFM. By shifting the switching angle θ between Q1 and Q4, VAB is adjusted to a three-level square wave with a different proportion of zero-voltage level, and then output is regulated by PSM. When θ = 0°, VAB is a two-level square wave without a zero-voltage level; when θ = 180°, VAB equals 0, and the output voltage can be regulated to 0, theoretically.
Figure 2 shows the typical gain characteristic of the LLC resonant converter based on FHA when applying PFM. The working zone can be simply divided into three types: #1 is the boost zone, where the switching frequency
fs is less than the resonant frequency
fr, and the voltage gain is larger than 1. The converter can realize primary-side ZVS and secondary-side ZCS when working at #1. However, reactive power circulation would reduce the benefit when the voltage-gain range is wide at this zone. The buck zone is #2: when the switching frequency
fs is larger than the resonant frequency
fr, and the voltage gain is less than 1, the converter realizes primary-side ZVS but loses secondary-side ZCS when working in this area. The capacitive zone is #3: the whole resonant tank has a capacitive load, ZVS performance is lost, and it is necessary to avoid working in this area for MOSFET.
Both #1 and #2 have advantages for realizing ZVS performance: #1 can fully meet the demand for narrow voltage-gain range application, but when it comes to wide gain range, only #1 participation will result in a large reactive power circulation, which undermines the benefits of the converter. To solve this, #2 also participates in the work to regulate the gain, but the frequency range will be large when the voltage range and load range are wide, which is not good for the design of magnetic components and the gate driver. PSM in #2 can change the equivalent input of the resonant tank to reduce voltage gain with a narrow frequency range, but ZVS performance will be hard to achieve if the phase-shifting angle
θ is large. To solve these problems, in this paper, an adaptive phase-shifting angle is proposed to ensure the ZVS performance in #2 and reduce the sum of the turn-off currents; the design principle will be discussed in
Section 3.
2.2. Key Working Waveforms When Appling PSM
In this part, the working zone #2 is mainly been discussed where the working frequency
fs is larger than the resonant frequency
fr. The equivalent circuit of the converter is shown in
Figure 3:
a,
S0 and
b are state parameters which consist of different modes, and
Table 1 shows the A–I stage with different state combinations.
One complete switching period of the LLC converter is composed of stage A–I, as paper [
21] reveals: the stage combinations ACD, CDE, CDF and CDEF are the most common modes, while other modes only occur at very light load, which is not discussed in this paper. The four types of working modes correspond to different phase-shifting-angle-
θ and switching-frequency-
fs combinations at #2 working zone. Type 1 represents the situation when
fs is large and
θ is small. In this type, the converter performs like a single PFM; the primary-side ZVS can be guaranteed, and the secondary-side ZCS is lost. This type can be divided into five working modes at a positive half cycle, as
Figure 4 shows. When including the dead time, the negative half cycle is similar to the positive, which will not be explained repeatedly.
Mode 1 [t1–t2]: In this mode, the inverter-bridge output voltage VAB equals Vin, Lm is clamped by −nVo, im decreases linearly, Lr resonates with Cr, iLr rises rapidly, and the secondary-side rectifier diodes Dr2 and Dr3 conduct to transfer energy to the load side.
Mode 2 [t2–t3]: At t2, im drops to the same value as iLr, while VAB still equals Vin, but the resonant process will result in a difference in current between iLr and im. Then Dr1 and Dr4 are turned on and Dr2 and Dr3 are turned off. Due to the continuous conduction mode of the diodes, Dr2 and Dr3 lose ZCS performance. Lm begins to be clamped by nVo and rises linearly, and Lr continues to resonate with Cr.
Mode 3 [t3–t4]: This is the dead-time mode. After Q1 turns off, iLr is positive, then C2 is discharged and C1 is charged until the D2 freewheels. Thus, this mode provides the conditions for the ZVS performance of Q2.
Mode 4 [t4–t5]: After Q2 turns on, VAB equals 0, Lr and Cr are still resonating, Lm is clamped by nVo, im rises linearly, and Dr1 and Dr4 conduct to transfer energy to the load side.
Mode 5 [t5–t6]: This is the dead-time mode. After Q4 turns off, iLr is positive, then C3 is discharged and C4 is charged until the D2 freewheels. Thus, this mode provides the conditions for the ZVS of Q3. Compared to mode 3, at this mode, due to iLr decreasing rapidly at mode 4, the turn-off current of Q4 is reduced, and thus the turn-off loss is reduced. Owing to the reduction in iLr, the ZVS implementation for Q3 will be harsher, so a minimum value of iLr needs to be maintained for a reliable ZVS performance of Q3.
Type 2 represents the situation when
fs and
θ are moderate, and the load is light. In this type,
Lm will join to the resonance between
Lr and
Cr at 0 voltage level of
VAB, so the secondary-side ZCS is obtained. This type can be divided into five working modes at the positive half cycle, as
Figure 5 shows, when including the dead time. Due to the limited space of the article, only Mode 4 [
t4–
t5] is discussed. Other modes are similar to the working condition of the ACD type.
Mode 4 [t4–t5]: At t4, iLr drops to the same value as im, then Lm begins to join to the resonance between Lr and Cr; im keeps consistent with iLr, and thus no current transits to the secondary side, and Dr1 and Dr4 achieve ZCS performance. Due to the iLr drops in mode 3 [t4–t5], the turn-off loss of Q4 is reduced and the ZVS implementation for Q3 will be harsher. A minimum value of iLr needs to be maintained for a reliable ZVS performance of Q3.
Type 3 represents the situation when
fs is low but
θ is large and the load is heavy. Due to this reason, the ZVS performance of the lagging bridge is easily lost, and the hard switching performance will impact the reliability and efficiency seriously. This type can also be divided into five working modes at a positive half cycle as
Figure 6 shows, when including the dead time. Due to the limited space of the article, only mode 4 [
t4–
t5] and mode 5 [
t5–
t6] are discussed; other modes are similar to the CDE type.
Mode 4 [t4–t5]: Due to Cr being charged by a large current iLr in [t1–t4], when iLr drops to the same value as im at t4, Lm will not join in with the resonance with Lr and Cr, and the different current between iLr and im will make Dr1 and Dr4 turn off and Dr2 and Dr3 turn on. This means Dr1 and Dr4 lose ZCS performance. In this mode, iLr keeps decreasing and then changes to the negative direction, which will make Q3 lose ZVS performance.
Mode 5 [t5–t6]: This is the dead-time mode. After Q4 turns off, owing to the negative iLr, D4 freewheels, so the energy stored in C3 will not be released, and the ZVS performance of Q3 is lost.
Type 4 represents the situation which falls between type 3 and type 4. It can be divided into six working modes at a positive half cycle, as
Figure 7 shows, when including the dead time. Mode 4 [
t4–
t5] is equal to mode 4 in type 2, and mode 5 [
t5–
t6] is equal to mode 5 in type 3. Thus, it can be inferred that the ZVS performance of
Q3 is hard to achieve, and the ZCS performance of the rectifier diodes is lost.
From the key waveform of the four different types, the soft-switching performance characteristic can be concluded as in
Table 2. It can be seen that only the ACD type and the CDE type have the ZVS characteristic for the primary-side switches, and that the ZCS characteristic for the secondary-side diodes only occurs at the CDE type. Thus, for the efficiency and reliability of the converter, only type ACD and type CDE are accepted, while type CDF and type CDEF should be avoided.