1. Introduction
High power density/efficiency dc/dc converters [
1,
2] have been proposed to reduce unnecessary power loss in order to reduce environmental pollution and met global energy demands. Clean and renewable energy sources meet these requirements to provide available ac or dc power to ac utilities, dc micro-grids, residential houses and commercial buildings by using power electronic based converters or inverters. High-voltage pulse width modulation (PWM) converters have been presented for industry power units [
3,
4], dc micro-grid systems [
5,
6,
7] and dc traction or dc light rail transportation systems [
8,
9]. For these applications, the dc bus voltage is regulated between 750 V and 800 V. Full bridge circuits with a high switching frequency high-voltage rating SiC MOSFET or high-voltage rating insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) devices can be adopted for high dc voltage applications. However, 1200 V SiC MOSFET devices are expensive and 1200 V IGBT devices have low switching frequency problems. Cost and performance are always the two main issues in the development of the available and high reliability power converters. Therefore, MOSFET power devices have been widely adopted in high efficiency power electronics. To improve the low-voltage drawback of MOSFETs in high-voltage applications, zero voltage switching, multi-level circuit topologies [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14] have been developed and proposed to decrease conduction and switching losses. The phase shift pulse width modulation (PSPWM) and frequency modulation have normally been adopted to regulate duty cycle or switching frequency. However, the main disadvantage of conventional PSPWM is high circulating current losses at low effective duty cycle. In order to reduce circulating current, an active or passive snubber used on the low-voltage side has been proposed in [
15,
16,
17]. A modular dc/dc converter [
18] using low power rating modular circuits in series or parallel connection has been proposed to increase circuit efficiency and power rating. However, the current between each modular circuit may be unbalanced. To accomplish current balance issue, several current balancing approaches have been presented in [
19,
20].
A series/parallel-connected dc/dc converter is proposed to accomplish reduced primary circulating current, a soft switching operation, and balanced input voltages and output currents. Two full bridge circuits with series/parallel connection on input/output side are used in the studied circuit to achieve voltage and current sharing for the high voltage input and current output. Therefore, power devices on each full bridge circuit have
Vin/2 voltage stress. To prevent input split voltages imbalance, a voltage balance capacitor was used on the input side to automatically achieve split voltages balance. Passive snubber circuits were employed on output side to create a positive voltage on the secondary rectified terminal under the commutated state so that the primary current at the commutated state can be reduced. To realize current sharing of two full bridge circuits, a current-balance magnetic component was adopted on the high-voltage side. If two currents are unbalanced, then one induced voltage of MC component is decreased to lessen the larger converter current. Therefore, two converter currents can be compensated automatically. PSPWM was adopted to control power devices and accomplish soft switching operation of active switches. The organization of this paper is as follows: The circuit structure and the principle of operation are discussed in
Section 2. The steady state operation of the presented converter is shown in
Section 3. Test results with a laboratory prototype are presented and investigated in
Section 4. The conclusions of the studied converter are discussed in
Section 5.
2. Circuit Structure and Principle of Operation
High-voltage converters were researched and presented for industry power supplies, dc traction vehicle and dc micro-grid systems. Ac/dc power converters with low harmonic currents, high power factor (PFC) and a stable dc voltage shown in
Figure 1a are required for industry power converters. Normally, the dc voltage
VH is controlled at 760 V. Then, a high-frequency link converter is adopted to provide low-voltage output.
Figure 1b illustrates the basic power distributed diagrams on dc light rail vehicle. A high-voltage dc converter can convert a 760 V input to supply a low-voltage output for battery charger, control, and communication demands.
Figure 1c demonstrates the blocks of a bipolar dc micro-grid system to integrate ac utility system, clean energy generators and industry load and residential load into a common dc bus voltage.
Figure 2 gives the converter configuration of the developed circuit with series/parallel connection of full bridge circuits to achieve low circulating current loss, soft switching for power MOSFETs, and balanced input split voltages and output current sharing. The first full bridge circuit has power MOSFETs
S1-
S4 with the output capacitors
C1-
C4, leakage or external inductor
Lr1, transformer
T1, magnetic core
MC, filter inductor
Lo1, secondary-side rectifier diodes
D1 and
D2, and passive circuit including
Ca1,
Da1 and
Db1. Likewise, the second full bridge circuit includes the components
S5-
S8,
C5-
C8,
Lr2,
T2,
MC,
Lo2,
D3,
D4,
Ca2,
Da2 and
Db2.
Cin,1 and
Cin,2 are input split capacitors and
Cb is the balance capacitor. Each circuit can transfer one-half rated power to the secondary side. The magnetic core [
20] is used to balance
iLr1 and
iLr2. Under the balanced primary currents (|
iLr1| = |
iLr2|), the induced voltages
VL1 and
VL2 are zero. If
iLr1 and
iLr2 are unbalanced (such as |
iLr1| > |
iLr2|), the induced voltage
VL1 of MC cell is decreased in order to decrease
iLr1 and
VL2 is increased to increase
iLr2. Thus,
iLr1 will equal
iLr2 and
VL1 =
VL2 = 0. PSPWM is used to control
S1~
S8 and have zero voltage switching on the MOSFETs. Power switches
S1~
S4 and
S5~
S8 have identical PWM waveforms. The balance capacitor
Cb is linked between points
a and
c. If
S1 and
S5 are on and
S2 and
S6 are off, then
VCb =
VCin,1. Likewise,
VCb =
VCin,2 if
S2 and
S6 are on and
S1 and
S5 are in the off. Since the duty cycle
dS1 =
dS2 = 0.5, it is obvious that
VCb =
VCin,1 =
VCin,2 =
Vin/2. Thus, the drain voltages of
S1~
S8 are
Vin/2. To decrease the primary-side circulating currents, passive snubbers,
Ca1,
Da1,
Db1,
Ca2,
Da2,
Db2, are used on the presented circuit. At the same time, the filter inductor voltages
vLo1 =
vCa1 −
Vo and
vLo2 =
vCa2 −
Vo rather than −
Vo in the traditional full bridge duty cycle converters.
The operation principle of the presented circuit is discussed with the assumptions: (1)
Cin,1 =
Cin,2; (2)
C1 =….=
C8 =
Coss; (3)
Ca1 =
Ca2 =
Ca; (4)
Lm1 =
Lm2 =
Lm; (5)
Lo1 =
Lo2 =
Lo; (6)
Lr1 =
Lr2 =
Lr; (7)
VCb =
VCin,1 =
VCin,2 =
Vin/2; and (8)
n1 =
n2 =
n.
Figure 3 shows the PWM waveforms of the studied converter. The duty cycle of
S1~
S8 is 0.5. The gating signals of
S4 (
S3) is shifted to
S1 (
S2), respectively. Due to the switching states of power devices, the converter has fourteen steps in a switching period. The PWM waveforms are symmetrical for every half cycle. Therefore, only the first seven steps are discussed and the circuits of first seven operating steps are illustrated in
Figure 4.
Step 1 [t0, t1]: Before t0, S1, S4, S5, S8, D1 and D3 conduct, iLr1 > 0 and iLr2 > 0. After t0, power MOSFETs S1 and S5 turn off. C1 and C5 are charged and C2 and C6 are discharged. The energy on Lr1, Lr2, Lo1 and Lo2 can discharge C2 and C6. Equations (1) and (2) give the soft switching conditions of S2 and S6.
If these conditions are satisfied, then vC1 = vC5 = Vin/2 and vC2 = vC6 = 0 at t1. The time duration in step 1 is obtained in Equation (3).
The time duration Δt01 is related to the load current and input voltage.
Step 2 [t1, t2]: At t1, vC2 = vC6 = 0. The positive primary currents iLr1 and iLr2 will flow through the body diode of S2 and S6. Thus, power MOSFETs S2 and S6 can achieve zero-voltage switching after t1. The ac side voltages vab = vcd = 0 and iLr1 and iLr2 decrease. Therefore, Da1 and Da2 conduct at this freewheeling state. The magnetizing voltages vLm1 and vLm2 are clamped at vCa1 and vCa2, respectively. The primary inductor voltages vLr1 = −n1vCa1 and vLr2 = −n2vCa2 and the filter inductor voltages vLo1 = vCa1 − Vo < 0 and vLo2 = vCa2 − Vo < 0. Therefore, iLr1, iLr2, iLo1 and iLo2 are all decreased in this step.
Thus, the circulating current is decreased under the commutated state. In this step, the balance capacitor voltage VCb = VCin,2.
Step 3 [t2, t3]: At time t2, iD1 = iD3 = 0 and D1 and D3 are off. Then, iCa1 = −iLo1, iCa2 = −iLo2, iLr1 = iLm1(t2) and iLr2 = iLm2(t2). Since iLm1(t2) and iLm2(t2) are close to zero, the circulating current is removed. The filter inductor voltages vLo1 = vCa1 − Vo < 0 and vLo2 = vCa2 − Vo < 0. The secondary-side currents iLo1 and iLo2 are lessened.
Step 4 [t3, t4]: At t3, power MOSFETs S4 and S8 turn off. C3 and C7 are discharged and C4 and C8 are charged. The energy on Lr1 and Lr2 can discharge C3 and C7 and the soft switching conditions of S3 and S7 are expressed in Equations (8) and (9).
Step 5 [t4, t5]: This step starts at
t4 when
vC3 =
vC7 = 0. Due to
iLr1(
t4) > 0 and
iLr2(
t4) > 0, the body diodes of
S3 and
S7 conduct. Then,
S3 and
S7 naturally conduct at zero-voltage switching after
t4. In this step,
vab = −VCin,1,
vcd = −VCin,2,
VCb =
VCin,2,
vLm1 = −
n1vCa1,
vLm2 = −
n2vCa2,
vLo1 =
vCa1 − Vo and
vLo2 =
vCa2 − Vo. In order to balance
iLr1 and
iLr2, the magnetic core MC is employed on the high-voltage side. Under current balance condition,
VL1 =
VL2 = 0. Therefore,
vLr1 ≈
n1vCa1 − Vin/2 and
vLr2 ≈
n2vCa2 −
Vin/2. It can be observed that
iLr1,
iLr1,
iLo1 and
iLo2 all decrease in this step. When the secondary-side diode currents
iD2 =
iLo1 and
iD4 =
iLo2 at time
t5, diodes
Da1 and
Da2 are reverse biased. In this step,
iD2 and
iD4 increase from zero to
iLo1 and
iLo2, respectively and the time duration in step 5 can be obtained as:
Since Da1 and Da2 are still conducting in this step, the duty loss is calculated in Equation (11).
Step 6 [t5, t6]: At time t5, iD2 = iLo1 and iD4 = iLo2. Then, the secondary-side diodes Da1 and Da2 are off and Db1 and Db2 are on in this step. The inductances Lr1/(n1)2 (Lr2/(n2)2) and Ca1 (Ca2) are resonant with frequency . Since vLo1 = vCa1 and vLo2 = vCa2, iLo1 and iLo2 both increase in this step. In order to force iDb1 = iDb2 = 0 at t6, the half resonant cycle 1/(2fR) must be less than deff,minTsw/2. The primary magnetizing voltages vLm1 = n1(vCa1 + Vo) and vLm2 = n2(vCa2 + Vo) and the primary inductor current iLr1 ≈ −(iLo1 + iCa1)/n1 and iLr2 ≈ −(iLo2 + iCa2)/n2.
Step 7 [t6, t7]: At time t6, iD2 = iLo1 and iD4 = iLo2. Then diodes Db1 and Db2 are off. The filter inductor voltages vLo1 ≈ Vin/(2n1) − Vo and vLo2 ≈ Vin/(2n2) − Vo so that iLo1 and iLo2 increase. At t7, S2 and S6 turn off.
3. Steady State Analysis
Each full bridge converter in the presented converter supplies one-half of load power to low-voltage side. To balance
iLr1 and
iLr2, the magnetic component MC is employed in the studied converter. Under current balance condition,
VL1 =
VL2 = 0. It can be observed that the average voltages
VCa1=
VCa2 =
Vin/(2
n1) −
Vo in step 6. Under steady state operation,
iLo1 and
iLo2 at
t0 and
t0 +
Tsw in every switching period are identical,
iLo1(
t0) =
iLo1(
t0 +
Tsw) and
iLo2(
t0) =
iLo2(
t0 +
Tsw). Thus, Equation (12) is derived according to voltage-second balance condition.
where
d5 and
d6 are duty cycles in steps 5 and 6, respectively. Based on
VCa1 =
Vin/(2
n1) −
Vo,
Vo can be derived in Equation (13) under steady state.
where
deff =
d −
d5 is an effective duty ratio and
δ is duty ratio when
S1 (
S2) and
S4 (
S3) are conducting. From Equation (13), the voltage gain is expressed in Equation (14).
From the given input and output voltages, the turns ratio
n is derived as:
Therefore, the minimum primary turns
np and secondary turns
ns are derived in Equation (16).
where Δ
Bmax: maximum flux density range,
Ae: effective cross area, and
VLm: primary voltage. In steady state,
ILo1 =
ILo2 =
Io/2,
VCin,1 =
VCin,2 =
VCb =
Vin/2 and
vS1,ds =…=
vS8,ds =
Vin/2. If the effective duty cycle is defined, then the ripple currents Δ
Lo1 and Δ
Lo2 can be obtained in Equation (17).
If the ripple currents ΔiLo1 = ΔiLo2 = ΔiLo are given or selected, then output inductances are achieved in Equation (18).
The winding turns of filter inductors
Lo1 and
Lo6 are expressed as:
The voltage ratings and average currents on D1~D4 are expressed in Equations (20)–(23).
Based on Equation (11), the necessary inductances
Lr1 and
Lr2 are obtained as:
4. Test Results
The studied circuit was verified through a prototype. In the prototype circuit,
Vin was between 750 V and 800 V,
Vo was 24 V,
Io,rated was 70 A,
fsw is 60
kHz, the effective duty cycle
deff was 0.35, and the duty loss in step 5 was 0.01. Therefore, the turn-ratio and the primary-side inductances were obtained as:
In the prototype circuit, the actual magnetizing inductance, Lm1 = Lm2 = 2 mH, the primary turns n1,p and n2,p were 48 and the secondary turns n1,s and n2,s were 4 with TDK EER-42 magnetic core. The maximum ripple currents ΔiLo was assumed as 4 A. The Lo1 and Lo2 can be obtained in Equation (27).
MOSFETs SiHG20N50C with 500 V/20 A ratings were selected for S1~S8. MBR40100PT with 100 V/40 A ratings were selected for D1~D4 and Da1~Db2. The magnetic coupling (MC) transformer np:ns = 24 turns:24 turns. The adopted capacitors were Cin,1 = Cin,2 = 240 μF/450 V, Cb = 1 μF, Ca1 = Ca2 = 8.8 μF and Co = 2200 μF/100 V. The PSPWM integrated circuit UCC3895 was selected as a controller to control S1~S8.
The experimental test bench is given in
Figure 5. The dc power source was using a two Chroma 62016P-600-8 programmable dc power supply connected in series to supply 800 V at the input side of the proposed circuit. The dc electronic load was a Chroma 63112A programmable dc load. The digital oscilloscope Tektronix TDS3014B was adopted to measure the test waveforms.
Figure 6 illustrates the test waveforms of the gate voltages of switches
S1~
S4 in first full bridge circuit at rated power. The phase-shift angle between
S1 and
S4 depended on the input voltage. The gating voltages of
S5~
S8 in second full bridge circuit were identical to
S1~
S4, respectively. The gating voltages
vS1,g and
vS4,g and ac voltages
vab and
vcd at rated power are demonstrated in
Figure 7. Three-level voltages were observed on
vab and
vcd.
Figure 8 illustrates the test waveforms
vab,
vcd,
iLr1 and
iLr2 under 20% power and rated power. Two primary-side currents were well balanced with each other due to the current balance magnetic core is used to achieve current sharing.
Figure 9 gives the test results of
VCin1,
VCin2 and
VCb at rated power. Split capacitor voltages were well balanced with
VCin1 = 401.6 V and
VCin2 = 398.4 V.
Figure 10 gives the measured waveforms of output side currents.
Figure 11 provides the test waveforms of
iLo1,
iDb1,
io1 and
io2 under different load conditions. It is clear that
io1 and
io2 were balanced.
Figure 12 provides the measured results of
S1 under 20% power and rated power. The soft switching of
S1 was succeeded from 20% power to rated power. The other switches such as
S2,
S5 and
S6 had the same characteristics as
S1. Therefore,
S2,
S5 and
S6 were also turned on with soft switching turn-on from 20% power.
Figure 13 demonstrates the measured waveforms of
S4 under half and full loads. The soft switching of
S4 are realized from 50% load due to the energy on
Lm1 and
Lm2. Likewise,
S3,
S7 and
S8 have same characteristics as
S4 and
S3,
S7 and
S8 with soft switching turn-on from 50% power. The test efficiencies of the presented circuit are 91.7% at 20% power, 93.5% at 50% power and 92.9% at 100% power and shown in
Figure 14.