1. Introduction
With the fast development of distributed power generation and energy storage facilities, efficient power conversion technologies have become hotspots in the research field of power electronics [
1,
2]. Among various kinds of power electronics systems, the isolated bidirectional DC-DC converter (IBDC) has gained considerable attention since it can manipulate the power flow magnitude and direction between two DC buses with different voltage levels [
3]. The dual-active-bridge (DAB) type of isolated converter is one typical topology of IBDC that is featured with high power density and control simplicity [
4,
5]. Connected to an LC resonant tank, the dual-bridge series resonant DC-DC converter (DBSRC) is evaluated experimentally in [
6]. The main operation characteristics of DBSRC with the fundamental harmonic approximation (FHA) method are discussed in [
7]. However, FHA method is unable to predict a state accurately since the FHA only considers the fundamental component. In [
8], an accurate DBSRC model is established according to the characteristics of power transfer and switching behavior. Most reported literature are concerned with steady-state analysis with different optimal modulation controls for minimized loss [
9,
10]. Various hybrid control methods in which switching frequency modulation is combined with phase-shift modulation are proposed to extend soft-switching regions [
11,
12]. The reactive power is set as the optimized objective and solved using particle swarm optimization method in [
13]. Later, in [
14,
15], to depress the conduction loss, a minimum current modulation scheme with asymmetric-adjusted PWM is investigated.
Although the steady-state performance of a DBSRC has been significantly improved, those optimized modulations cannot enhance transient-state performance of DBSRC. The single-loop control strategy is the mainstream feedback control strategy for DBSRC, where the dynamic model is determined by measurement voltage error only. Due to the digital delay in transport process, the fast dynamic response cannot be implemented directly in DBSRC with single-loop control. Hence, on the simplified average model, a dynamic model with average input and output voltage is proposed to improve the dynamic response [
16]. A small-signal model of DBSRC is further introduced in [
17] and model-predictive control has been investigated in [
18]. All these feedback control strategies ignore the transient state in the analysis as the converter adapts to different transfer power demands. The transient process from one load to another, even though the series capacitor can block the DC component in steady state, may have transient voltage/current oscillations due to improper transient modulation. Meanwhile, the oscillations in the resonant tank might induce the saturation of the high-frequency transformer, causing slow and uneven transient response [
19,
20]. To eliminate the DC bias current, a fast transient phase-shift strategy is initially proposed for a DAB converter [
21]. By adopting the fast transient phase-shift strategy, all possible transient processes are discussed in detail [
22]. Some improved transient phase-shift strategies have been developed to reduce the DC bias current [
23,
24]. In [
25], the DC bias current can be eliminated at the expense of ZVS operation. A state machine is designed for different working mode transitions in [
26]. A universal solution for all the transient states with seamless transient processes is investigated in [
27]. However, these phase-shift strategies are optimized for non-resonant transient-state converters and need to select the switching pattern for multiple working modes, which complicates the implementation of the control strategy. There has been little quantitative analysis of dynamic phase-shift strategy for resonant transient-state converters. A trajectory-switching modulation strategy is proposed to suppress high-frequency transient oscillations for DBSRC [
28]. Using state-plane analysis, an optimal trajectory for an LLC transient-state converter is proved [
29]. A dynamic control strategy of a DBSRC converter based on trajectory prediction is proposed in [
30]. However, in [
29,
30], the cost of trajectory estimation is the increasing complexity level of control.
In general, with a conventional low-gain PI controller, no matter what modulation method is used, it executes only a small change of phase-shift angle in every switching cycle to produce a smooth but slow dynamic response. Although the converter can have an oscillation-free performance, the total transient process is long. A high-gain controller leads to a smaller steady-state tracking error, but also gives rise to a more abrupt and larger transient variation of phase-shift angle, which tends to produce undesirable large-amplitude high-frequency transient oscillations if no special measurement is used. This paper proposes two fast transient modulation (FTM) methods to achieve a fast and overshoot-free step-load change process. The two methods will adjust the durations of switching intervals to match the predicted ones. Thus, it can effectively solve large overshoot current and long transient response time in the transient process and obtain a fast transient response. The work was presented in [
31] and has been extensively expanded with more investigation detail and experimental results. The outline of this paper is as follows.
Section 2 presents the operating principle of the converter with phase-shift control, and the steady-state trajectory can be obtained. Two fast transient modulation methods at the step-load-change transition are then developed in
Section 3. In
Section 4, both simulation and experimental tests are conducted to verify the effectiveness of the proposed modulation methods. Finally, conclusions are drawn in
Section 5.
2. Steady-State Operation of a DBSRC
The topology of a DBSRC is presented in
Figure 1. Two DC voltage sources are connected with their active H bridges respectively, which are connected by a series resonant tank and a high-frequency(HF) isolation transformer. The resonant tank voltage and current are
and
. The resonant capacitor voltage is
. The turns ratio of the HF transformer is
. It is assumed in this work that the conduction angle of each switch is
and two switches in each bridge arm are operated complementarily. As a result, the two HF AC voltages
and
are square-wave with a duty ratio of 0.5, whose amplitudes are
and
, respectively.
The steady-state waveform of DBSRC is illustrated in
Figure 2.
is the phase-shift between
and
, where
is the phase-shift ratio. The HF switching period is
. One HF switching period can be divided into four modes, in each of which the resonant tank voltage
is different. Referring to
Figure 2, values of
in each mode are
,
,
,
respectively.
is the primary side referred secondary DC source voltage.
Applying Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL) and characteristics of LC, the following differential equations using
and current
as variables are obtained:
The general solutions can be obtained and given as:
where
are the initial values of
and
in the mode, respectively. The switching frequency is
, the resonant frequency is
, and
is the characteristic impedance of the resonant circuit. The normalized switching frequency is
and
.
Since both
and
are periodic signals, the values of them at the boundary points between each mode can be found by solving the differential equations of each mode in sequence. With the help of Equation (
2), the values of current
and voltage
at
and
are obtained:
where
=
is the voltage gain. It should be noted that those values are functions of the phase-shift ratio
D. Due to the anti-symmetry features in steady-state operation, the values at
and
can be obtained easily with help of Equation (
3).
According to the analysis results, the steady-state trajectory of
and
can be drawn as a closed loop for a given phase-shift ratio
D, which is illustrated in
Figure 2b. A larger phase-shift ratio
D will result in a loop with larger size. The moving direction in the loop is clockwise and the sequence of mode is 1→2→3→4 for a positive
D. The coordinates of boundary point
is (
,
) with
, which are the boundary values marked in
Figure 2a.
3. Transient Modulation at the Step-Load-Change Transition
With the phase-shift control, the transmission power of a DBSRC is proportional to
[
6]:
At the request of a step-load-change command, D is supposed to have a corresponded step change too. It is assumed that the converter has an initial phase-shift is , and the final phase-shift is . Apparently, the adjustment can be completed by modulating the gating signals of the eight switches in many different ways.
3.1. DTM
The simplest and direct way, named direct transient modulation (DTM), can be described as follows: the gating signals of one of the two bridges are fixed, while the gating signals of the other bridge are shifted directly as required. As an example, the process of DTM with
is illustrated in
Figure 3. The primary HF AC voltage
is assumed to be fixed, and the position of
is moved by
through the modulation of gating signals of
. For the waveform of
in the figure, the dotted line represents the original waveform and the solid one represents the modified waveform. During the transition procedure, the duration of Mode 1 is lengthened by
by delaying the rising edge of
. The durations of followed pulses of
remain at
T. Consequently, in the followed regular period, the phase-shift between the two square voltages becomes
.
In another view angle, the step-load change process using DTM can be observed from the trajectory of
and
shown in
Figure 3b. It can be seen that the process starts from
on the small loop of
D and moves to
in sequence. However, the followed trajectory cannot match the loop of
instantly. Apparently, the transient process would have some oscillations and the track outside of the large
-loop means overshoot voltage and overshoot current. In theory, this process would last and cause unrespectable damage. In practical conditions, the oscillation would gradually diminish, and the trajectory would finally settle down to the loop of
thanks to the damping effect of parasitic resistance in the circuit. However, the parasitic resistance may cause extra conduction loss and should be minimized during actual circuit design and implementation.
3.2. Proposed FTM
To improve the step-change transient response, a fast transient modulation (FTM) is proposed in the current work. The objective is to let the original trajectory move naturally from the original loop to the final loop within one cycle. During the transient process, the durations of each mode should be adjusted properly so that the final values of and at the end of transient process should perfectly match the values at the beginning of a new period with the final phase-shift ratio.
Based on the observation of those trajectories, it can be concluded that the curvature of each mode is fixed and decided by the value of . The absolute values of in Mode 1 and 3 is the sum of two terminal voltages, which is larger than that in Mode 2 and 4. Consequently, the trajectories (or waveforms of and ) in Mode 1 and 3 have high dynamics, which should be used to speed up the transient process.
Unlike in DTM, the HF AC voltages on both sides are to be shifted in FTM. Two modulation factors x and y are introduced to define the change of the rising or falling edge of and , which in turn indicate the change of switching moment of – and –. The positive direction of x is defined to the right, while the positive direction of y is to the left. According to the number of steps involved, two methods based on FTM are to be discussed.
3.2.1. FTM-I with Three Steps
The first proposed method has three steps in the transient process. The basic idea of FTM-1 is exemplified with
(a step-up of
D) in
Figure 4a with the trajectory of
and
. It is seen that the whole process consists of three steps:
-
-
-
. As mentioned, initially Mode 1 (
-
) is used to move from the initial
D-loop to the outside
-loop, which is extended by
until it stops at
. With another unknown phase-shift
, Mode 2 continues, and it is expected to reach Mode 3 of the final loop. The proper selection of
x and
y should let the third step
-
be the part of
-loop. Starting from
, a new steady state begins. In addition, the whole process in located between the two loops, which indicates no overshoot voltage or current existing.
The modifications on the waveforms of
and
in the transient process are shown in
Figure 4b. During the transient, the resonant current and voltage can be evaluated as follows.
Mode 1 (
): The rising edge of
is delayed by
so that the duration of Mode 1 is extended from
to
. At the end of this step,
and
are calculated as:
where
and
are obtained from Equation (
3).
Mode 2 (
): The falling edge of
is delayed by
and the duration of Mode 2 is changed to
. At the end of this step,
and
are calculated as:
where
.
Mode 3 (
): the falling edge of
is not changed so that the duration of Mode 3 is
. At the end of this step,
and
are calculated as:
where
.
Mode 4 (
): the next rising edge of
is shifted earlier by
and consequently the duration of Mode 4 is
which matches the new steady state. As a result,
and
can be regarded as the initial values of current and voltage of the new steady state. According to Equation (
3),
and
can be expressed as:
Equaling (
7) to (
8), the values of
x and
y can be solved.
In the case of
, a similar process can be performed, and the principle is illustrated in
Figure 5. It is seen that the whole process starts from Mode 2 (
) with a reduced duration
and Mode 3 is used to approach the small loop of
at
. Part of Mode 4 perfectly coincides with that of the final state loop and the new state-state begins at
.
In conclusion, FTM-I consists of three different modes. Variables
x and
y are associated with the modulation of
and
respectively. During the transient process, only one edge of
is shifted to the right or delayed by
, where
x has the same polarity as that of
d. For the waveform of
, the falling edge is shifted to the left by
, where
y is positive regardless of the polarity of
d. The next falling edge with all followed edges is shifted earlier by
. Consequently,
has two transient pulses, whose width is
and
respectively.
only has one transient pulse with the width at
. The durations of each mode in the transient process are concluded in
Table 1.
3.2.2. FTM-II with Two Steps
The basic idea of FTM-II is also exemplified with
(a step-up of
D). According to the trajectory of
and
in
Figure 6a, two variables
x and
y are introduced to define the durations of two transient steps. As with FTM-I, the duration of Mode 1 is increased by
to let the trajectory cut into the
-loop at
quickly. As part of
-loop already, the duration of Mode 2 is adjusted to stop right at the boundary point
of
-loop, which is attributed to the proposed selections of
x and
y. Therefore, the converter enters a new steady state now after a two-step transient process of
-
-
. Again, no overshoot voltage or current exists since the transient trajectory is completely between the two loops. During the transient process, the current and voltage can be evaluated as follows referring to
Figure 6b.
In the first two modes of FTM-II, the calculations for
,
are exactly the same as Equations (
5) and (
6), i.e., Mode 1 has a duration of
and Mode 2 has a duration of
. The next falling edge of
is purposely shifted so that the duration of Mode 3 is
and the followed pulses all have regular duration of
T. Therefore, if the values of the voltage and current at the end of Mode 2 are forced to be equal to the corresponding values in the final steady state, and the converter can enter the new steady state instantly. According to Equation (
3),
and
are expected to be:
By matching Equations (
6) with (
9), the values of
x and
y can be determined.
The principle of FTM-II for
is illustrated in
Figure 7. Similar to FTM-I for step-down of D, the actual transient process starts from Mode 2 rather than Mode 1. Based on the transient trajectory, Mode 2 (
) is completed earlier so that Mode 3 can move into one side of
-loop. By ending Mode 3 right on the boundary point, a new steady-state period begins at
.
In conclusion, FTM-II consists of two different modes. For the case of
, both
x and
y are positive.
is shifted to the left by
by reducing its positive pulse once and two consecutive edges of
are delayed by
and
. For the case of
,
x is negative and
y is still positive.
is shifted to the left by
by reducing its positive pulse once and two consecutive edges of
are shifted earlier by
and delayed by
respectively. If
,
has two transient pulses, whose width is
and
respectively.
only has one transient pulse with the width at
. If
,
has two transient pulses, whose widths are
and
respectively.
only has one transient pulse with the width at
. The durations of each mode in the transient process are concluded in
Table 2.
4. Simulation and Experimental Verification
To verify the feasibility of the proposed method, the step transient process of a DBSRC is simulated in PSIM. The specifications of the DBSRC in simulation and experiment are given in
Table 3. The two phase-shift ratios are
and
.
The simulation results for DTM, FTM-I, FTM-II are given in
Figure 8. For each method, two cases of step-up and step-down of
D are tested. For each case, the waveforms of
are recorded. On one side, waveforms of
and
using DTM show long-term oscillation with high overshoot current/voltage. On the other side, the two FTM methods give much better performance as the theoretical analysis predicts. Both step-up and step-down transient processes can be completed within one HF cycle. Moreover, there is no overshoot current/voltage shown in the process. In addition, the dynamic performance of DBSRC with a conventional PI controller and FTM are compared. The simulation results are shown in
Figure 9, where two cases of a same step-up of
D with a PI controller and FTM-I are illustrated. The waveforms from up to bottom are
D,
and
, respectively. It can be found that FTM is advantageous over conventional PI control in terms of response speed or total transient duration, since FTM (step change of
D) only uses one HF period while the conventional PI controller has longer transient duration due to the small-step increasing of
D.
In the lab, a prototype converter with same specifications as
Table 3 is built for further verifications. A DC power supply EA-PS 9500-10 is used to generate
while
is obtained from a DC electronic load EA-EL 9750-60B in CV mode. The transient control scheme is implemented in a TMS320F28335 DSP board. In steady state, the measured resonant current
and resonant capacitor voltages
are 4.0 A and 54.5 V for
, respectively. At
, those two steady-state values become 6.65 A and 86.5 V, respectively.
First, the two-step changes of
D using DTM are evaluated, and the transient waveforms are captured. For step-up of
D in
Figure 10a, an overshoot voltage and current of 21.5 V and 1.4 A are identified and the oscillation in the transient process lasts for almost 11 HF cycles. The similar phenomena of oscillation can be viewed in the case of the step-down of
D shown in
Figure 10b. The illustrated corresponding
trajectories confirm that the DTM is not a good selection due to long transient duration, and high overshoot voltage/current.
The experimental plots for the step-up of
D using FTM-I are presented in
Figure 10c. The values of
x and
y are found to be 0.777 and 0.444, respectively. A fast transient response can be achieved, which is apparently much improved compared with DTM. Due to the non-ideality of actual circuit, the transient process also lasted for more than one switching cycle, which can be identified easily from the trajectory. There is also small overshoot voltage/current. The case for the step-down of
D using FTM-I is presented in
Figure 10d. The values of
x and
y are found as 0.777 and 0.444, respectively. The obtained trajectory is almost the same as the theoretical one. The whole transient process is completed in three modes as marked in the plot and no oscillation can be viewed.
In
Figure 10e,f, the two-step-change cases using FTM-II are illustrated. As with FTM-I, the performance of the step-up case shows some deviations, where there are some oscillations after the transient modulation is done. On the other side, the step-down of
D can be accomplished without noticeable error.
The comparison of the experimental results of the three methods is concluded in
Table 4. The overshoot current and overshoot voltage are given in terms of both actual value and percentage. The overshoot values for step-down case are calculated using the final steady-state values as the reference. The performance of two FTM-based methods is pretty close, while the conditions of step-down cases look better than that of the step-up cases with almost negligible oscillation. Because many non-ideal factors are involved in the experimental test, there is a gap between the experimental results and the idealized simulation results. The deviation of resonant component values can be a main potential reason, which affects the accurate calculation of
x and
y. Moreover, the actual dead-band in gating signals can bring some errors too if the values of
x and
y are quite small. However, the experimental results still show the superiority of the proposed FTM-based methods. First, compared with DTM, the proposed FTM-I and FTM-II have significantly lower overshoot current and voltage. The overshoot current/voltage is restrained to a certain extent. Second, the proposed FTM-I and FTM-II are faster than DTM, which also shows that FTM-I and II have better transient performance.
5. Conclusions
For a DBSRC, transient oscillations may depress dynamic performance and output voltage quality. Furthermore, the DC bias current caused by the oscillations may increase the current stress of transformers and affect the reliability of converters. Thus, this paper proposes two methods based on fast transient modulation (FTM) to address these concerns. The operating principle and steady-state trajectory of DBSRC with phase-shift control were analyzed first. Then, two FTM methods were comprehensively presented. In terms of resonant voltage-current trajectory, the transient route of FTM is identified and limited between two steady-state loops. Therefore, one of the advantages of the methods is no overshoot current or voltage existing in the transient process. Since FTM enables the converter to enter the new steady state within one switching cycle theoretically, another advantage of the methods is that the converter has a high-quality and ultrafast dynamic response. Moreover, the detailed discussion and clear explanation about how to modulate the phase-shift ratio for the step-load-change transient under two FTM methods are provided, which can be regarded as guidance for industrial design and operation.
Compared with the conventional direct transient modulation, as demonstrated by both simulations and experiments, the proposed two FTM methods show obvious superiority in terms of the overshoot current/voltage and transient duration. The trade-off is that the determination of x and y is complicated and currently they can be pre-calculated and stored as a look-up table. More efforts will be made to simplify the calculation or find an alternative way to determine the suitable transient adjustment of gating signals.