In this section, load-profile based system-operation principles and the associated dynamic gate-voltage control methods are introduced. In the next paragraphs, case studies and simulations are conducted to evaluate the system performance. Moreover, to enhance the compensation efforts at low speed, a circulation current injection method is developed.
5.2. Case 1: Electric Drive of Rotating Machine under High Speed Operation
In a high speed operation scenario, simulations are conducted by using PLECS in the Matlab Simulink environment with a load condition of 200 Hz and varying amplitude
. It can be observed from (
17) that after measuring the load current
(i.e., phase current), the gate voltage control scheme can be readily applied to each power MOSFETs in an electric motor drive. Instead of a conventional gate driver that produces two-level pulses, a dynamic gate driver is proposed to generate a three-level gate signal. This gate signal starts with a high voltage stage (18 V for this case) for a fast switching performance, followed by the adjustable gate voltage
during the conduction stage to adjust the conduction losses. In
Figure 5, the system operation principle shows that its implementation can be readily realized by merely integrating three dynamic gate drivers. Other aspects, such as the power converter topology, modulation method, and control scheme (i.e., field-oriented-control in this case) will not be affected.
By observation of
Figure 6a, the dynamic gate voltage
of switch Cu, as obtained from (
17), follows the envelope of load current and is always higher than the required level
to operate the switch Cu in the PTC area. After that, the corresponding junction temperature response of switch Cu is then obtained from the electro-thermal model in
Figure 4. Simulations with a conventional two-level gate signal under the same load conditions are conducted to obtain the junction temperature for reference. Temperature swings
at different load transitions are depicted in
Figure 6b, and the values are listed in
Table 5. The power losses increase slightly as expected, however, the overall system efficiency is merely affected while operating with high output power (i.e., 4262 W in this case).
5.3. Case 2: Electric Drive of Linear Machine under Low Speed Operation
Low speed operation scenarios, for instance a lithography machine require large current during acceleration to achieve high propulsion force for fast motion control. Therefore, an electric motor drive contains six half-bridge legs is implemented in
Figure 7, where the load currents are conducted by paralleling switches. Although increasing the total part counts, switch power losses and junction temperature are reduced. The junction temperature in this case follows the load current profile, because of the current frequency is lower than the thermal cut-off frequency of
.
By applying (
13), the gate voltage
of switch Cu is obtained based on the load current
(45 A and
Hz in this case). To analyze the system performance, simulations are conducted by using the control scheme proposed in
Figure 7, and the results are depicted in
Figure 8.
By observation of
Figure 8a, part of
is clipped to the value of
to avoid entering the NTC region. The conduction losses are illustrated in
Figure 8b,c. It can be observed that, by adopting the three-level gate signal, the conduction losses profile
is raised and flattened compared to
, where the conventional two-level gate signal pulse are applied. As shown in
Figure 8d and
Table 6, the junction temperature response
indicate similar
but higher average temperature
with respect to
. There are two reasons behind this behavior: on one hand, the thermal capacitance of the chip die is quite small and therefore temperature drops immediately while power losses become lower; on the other hand, gate voltage is not allowed to be lower than
and the thermal compensation efforts are largely reduced as a consequence. It worth noting that, while
, the system efficiency drops to
compared to
in
Table 5 obtained at high speed operating condition. This is due to relatively small back-emf at low speed and consequently lower output power.
To improve the compensation efforts under low speed operation, the proposed motor drive containing six half-bridge legs and interconnected inductors is implemented in
Figure 9.
Two interconnected inductors are used to circulate high frequency current between two half-bridge legs. The circulation current frequency
should be above 20 times of the load current frequency
for sufficient compensation resolution. The circulation currents flow within the power converter itself and are not influencing the three-phase load current. Therefore, the inductor currents of phase C can be expressed as
By following Equation (
18), the inductor currents of other phases can be described similarly. To regulate the three-phase load current in a dq synchronously rotating reference frame [
33], a PI controller and space-vector modulation are adopted. For controlling the circulation current, a proportional-resonant (PR) controller with a resonant frequency
(i.e., 8 kHz in this case) is applied in the stationary reference frame [
34] as:
While conducting the circulation current, the drain current equals to the corresponding inductor current, and the RMS value of the drain current
of the switch Cu in each circulation current period
can be represented as
where as the duty cycle
Similar to (
7), the conduction losses produced during each circulation current period
are set to a constant
by
with
The gate voltage
is then found to be
In order to operate the power MOSFETs in the PTC area, the gate voltage has to suffice
Following the derivation steps from (
A2)–(
A4) in
Appendix A, the minimum circulation current amplitude
has to satisfy
In addition, by following the steps from (
20) to (
24), the circulation currents of other phases and gate voltages of the rest of switches can be derived similarly. By using the control scheme in
Figure 9, simulations are conducted with load current of 45 A, 10.4 Hz and results are illustrated in
Figure 10.
Figure 10a shows the inductor current
of phase C, which consists of half of the load current with frequency of 10.4 Hz and the circulation current with a frequency of 8 kHz. Therefore, a higher switching frequency (40 kHz in this case) is required to regulate the circulation current and thus producing more switching losses. The gate voltage
obtained from (
22) is depicted in
Figure 10b, which suffices the requirement of (
23) to operate the power MOSFET in the PTC area. As shown in
Figure 10c, by applying
, the conduction losses profile
is flattened compared to
, in the interval where no circulation occurs. The junction temperature responses are compared in
Figure 10d, and details are listed in
Table 7. It can be observed that, the junction temperature swing is significantly reduced down to 4.2 K by compromising the system efficiency, which results from higher losses due to the circulation current and higher switching frequency. In addition to that, low output power at low speed operation is another factor that reduces the system efficiency. Therefore, the thermal stress related failures will be avoided and lifetime is expected to increase. It is worth noting that this current injection method is only specified for applications with large current variation and consequently higher
, and critical requirement on the lifetime, such that efficiency can be compromised.
It is worth noting that, the gate voltage is calculated based on the obtained MOSFET parameters in
Table 3, which are fitted from the data-sheet. In other words, open-loop junction temperature control is applied by adjusting the gate voltage. As an inherent property of the loop-open controller, the controller output (i.e.,
) will be influenced in case of device parameter drifts. Therefore, a model-based closed-loop temperature control is recommended by adding a real-time temperature observer to improve the system performance. In terms of the controller safety robustness, thermal runaway is avoided by incorporating operation margins in (
A1), (A3) and (
A4) in
Appendix A, which ensures the PTC operation of the power MOSFETs.