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Design, Implementation, And Control Of A Two& / #8211 / stage Ac/dc Isolated Power Supply With High Input Power Factor And High EfficiencyKaya, Mehmet Can 01 October 2008 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis a two-stage AC/DC/DC power converter is designed and implemented. The AC/DC input stage of the converter consists of the two& / #8211 / phase interleaved boost topology employing the average current mode control principle. The output stage consists of a zero voltage switching phase shifted full bridge (ZVS& / #8211 / PS& / #8211 / FB) DC/DC
converter. For the input stage, main design goals are obtaining high input power factor, low input current distortion, and well regulated output dc voltage, and obtaining these attributes in a power converter with high power density. For the input stage, the interleaved structure has been chosen in order to obtain reduced line current ripple and EMI, reduced power component stresses, and improved power density. The control of the pre& / #8211 / regulator is provided by utilizing a new commercial monolithic integrated circuit, which provides interleaved continuous conduction mode power factor correction (PFC). The output stage is formed by utilizing the
available prototype hardware of a ZVS& / #8211 / PS& / #8211 / FB DC/DC converter and mainly the system integration and controller design and implementation studies have been conducted. The converter small signal model is derived and utilizing its transfer
function and employing voltage loop control, the output voltage regulator has been designed. The output voltage controller is implemented utilizing a digital signal processor (DSP). Integrating the AC/DC preregulator and DC/DC converter, a laboratory AC/DC/DC converter system with high overall performance has been obtained. The overall system performance has been verified via computer simulations and experimental results obtained from laboratory prototype.
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Design Of An Educational Purpose Multifunctional Dc/dc Converter BoardBaglan, Fuat Onur 01 August 2008 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis a multifunctional DC/DC converter board will be developed for utilization as an educational experiment set in the switched-mode power conversion laboratory of power electronic courses. The board has a generic power-pole structure allowing for easy configuration of various power converter topologies and includes buck, boost, buck-boost, flyback, and forward converter topologies. All the converters can be operated in the open-loop control mode with a switching frequency range of 30-100 kHz and a maximum output power of 20 W. Also the buck converter can be operated in voltage mode control and the buck-boost converter can be operated in peak-current-mode control for the purpose of demonstrating the closed loop control performance of DC/DC converters. The designed board allows for experimentation on the DC/DC converters to observe the macroscopic (steadystate/ dynamic, PWM cycle and low frequency) and microscopic (switching dynamic) behavior of the converters. In the experiments both such characteristics can be clearly observed such that students at basic learning level (involving only the macroscopic behavior), and students at advanced learning level (additionally involving the parasitic effects) can benefit from the experiments. The thesis reviews the switch mode conversion principles, gives the board design and proceeds with the experiments illustrating the capabilities of the experimental system.
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Topology development and analysis for multiple input DC/DC converterChoung, Seung Hoon 31 May 2011 (has links)
Nowadays, the number of applications which need more than one power source is increasing. Distributed generating systems or micro-grid systems normally use more than one power source or more than one kind of energy source. Also, to increase the utilization of renewable energy sources, diversified energy source combination is recommended. For example, a wind-photovoltaic generating system, a combination of a wind generator and photovoltaic array, can give a greater degree of freedom when choosing the install location. The combination of more power sources and diversified power sources makes it possible to obtain higher availability in a power system. A parallel connection of converters has been used to integrate more than one energy source in a power system. However, a multiple-input converter (MIC) can generally have the following advantages compare to a combination of several individual converters; (1) cost reduction, (2) compactness, (3) more expandability and (4) greater manageability.
First, this research suggests MIC topology comparison criteria that can be used as a decision guide for choosing a MIC topology depending on the application. Even though there are some MIC topology classification methods such as by the kind of combining methods, the classification methods are not enough to choose one particular topology. The comparison criteria presented in this dissertation are practical enough to decide which topology is suitable and should be chosen.
Second, a new MI modified inverse Watkins-Johnson converter (MIMIWJC) without a coupled inductor is proposed. The circuit configuration of this converter and its operation principles are described, including the open-loop and closed-loop circuit. For control purposes, a small signal model of the proposed converter is developed using Middlebrook’s extra element theorem. In addition, two possible control methods are introduced in this dissertation.
Finally, the theoretical analysis of the proposed converter is verified with simulations and experiments. / text
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High-power bi-directional DC/DC converters with controlled device stressesHan, Sangtaek 11 May 2012 (has links)
The objective of the research is to develop a cost-effective high-power bi-directional dc/dc converter with low total-device ratings, reduced system parasitic effects, and a wide input/output range. Additional objectives of the research are to develop a small-signal model and control methods, and to present performance characterizations. Device stresses in the proposed topology are controlled to maintain minimal levels by varying the duty ratio and phase-shift angle between the primary and the secondary bridges, which results in a low total-device rating, when compared to conventional bi-directional dc/dc topologies. In the proposed topology, soft switching, which reduces power loss, can be realized under specific operating conditions. When the condition that causes minimal device stress is satisfied, zero-voltage switching (ZVS) can be obtained. In the research, ZVS capability is explored for a wide range of voltage conditions as well as for the minimal device-stress condition. The performance characterization includes verifying the soft-switching regions and power-loss estimation. Another part of the thesis is the controller design of the converter. Small-signal models and feedback controllers are developed, and the controllers are experimentally validated. Because in the isolated high-frequency converters, transformer saturation is an important issue, a method to prevent transformer saturation is proposed and experimentally validated.
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A Current Re-distribution Scheme for Improved Energy Harvesting in Concentrating Photovoltaic Systems Using Fine-grained dc-dc ConversionZaman, Mohammad Shawkat 19 March 2013 (has links)
This thesis presents a distributed power-management architecture for concentrating photovoltaic (CPV) systems. Specifically, the Δ-conversion scheme with voltage equalization is analyzed and verified for the CPV system from Morgan Solar, Inc. This architecture uses inverting buck-boost converters, denoted Δ-converters, which equalize the voltages of neighbouring CPV cells in a series-connected string of cells and improve the systems tolerance to parameter variations. The power benefits of Δ-conversion and the Δ-converter current distributions are investigated using statistical simulations. The effectiveness of Δ-conversion in the presence of randomly distributed mismatches is demonstrated, and current cascading is identified as the main design challenge. The Δ-converter is modelled and compensated using Middlebrook's Extra Element Theorem. Analysis of measured data from a six-cell CPV system demonstrate the benefits of Δ-conversion under realistic scenarios. Experimental results from prototype systems show up to 31% power benefits in the presence of mismatches.
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Analysis and Implementation of Fine-grained Distributed Maximum Power Point Tracking in Photovoltaic SystemsPoshtkouhi, Shahab 19 December 2011 (has links)
This thesis deals with quantifying the merits of Distributed Maximum Power Point Tracking (DMPPT), as well as providing solutions to achieve DMPPT in PV systems. A
general method based on 3D modeling is developed to determine the energy yield of PV
installations exploiting different levels of DMPPT granularity. Sub-string-level DMPPT
is shown to have up to 30% more annual energy yield than panel-level DMPPT. A
Multi-Input-Single-Output (MISO) dc-dc converter is proposed to achieve DMPPT in
parallel-connected applications. A digital current-mode controller is used to operate the MISO converter in pseudo-CCM mode. For series-connected applications, the virtualparallel concept is introduced to utilize the robustness of the parallel connection. This concept is demonstrated on a three-phase boost converter. The topology offers reduced output voltage ripple under shading which increases the life-time of the output capacitor.
The prototypes yield output power benefits of up to 46% and 20% for the tested shading
conditions.
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Conversor CC-CC Não isolado de elevado ganho para aplicação no processamento de energia solar fotovoltaica / High gain non-isolated DC-DC converter applied on the processing of PV energyCabral, João Bosco Ribeiro Fernandes 06 March 2013 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2013-03-06 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This Master Thesis proposes a high gain non-isolated DC-DC converter applied on the processing of PV energy. The proposed converter is a boost converter with quadratic characteristic and with central point at its output. Basic operations and electric characteristics of a PV cell are described, including the procedures to determine its parameters. A model for numeric simulation is presented. A review of the high gain non-isolated DC-DC converters topologies is presented. Shows the converter´s transfer functions and the control strategy adopted as well as the design of control circuits. The control system is consisting of three loops, an internal loop of input current control, an external loop of total output voltage control and an additional loop of voltage unbalance control. The simulation and experimental results are shown to validate the analysis developed and demonstrate the performance of the control system adopted. / Esta Dissertação de Mestrado propõe um conversor CC-CC não isolado de elevado ganho para aplicação no processamento de energia solar fotovoltaica. O conversor proposto é um boost com característica quadrática e com ponto médio na sua saída. Descrevem-se o funcionamento básico e as características elétricas de uma célula fotovoltaica, incluindo-se o procedimento da determinação dos parâmetros e da modelagem dos módulos fotovoltaicos, apresentando-se um modelo para simulação numérica. Apresenta-se uma revisão de topologias de conversores CC-CC não isolados com elevado ganho estáticos. Apresentam-se as funções de transferência do conversor e a estratégia de controle adotada bem como o projeto dos circuitos de controle. O sistema de controle composto por três malhas de controle, uma malha interna de corrente de entrada, uma malha externa de tensão total e uma malha adicional de equalização de tensão. Resultados de simulação e experimentais são apresentados para validar as análises desenvolvidas e demonstrar o desempenho do sistema de controle adotado.
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Conception de convertisseurs DC/DC à base de MEMS / DC-DC conversion based on electrostatic MEMSGhandour, Sahar 17 March 2011 (has links)
La tendance actuelle vers la miniaturisation des circuits électroniques a poussé vers ledéveloppement des systèmes sur puce (SoC : System on Chip) contenant plusieurs composants. Cescomposants réalisant des fonctions variées, ont besoin de différentes tensions d’alimentation fourniesà l’aide de plusieurs convertisseurs DC/DC connectés à l’alimentation du SoC. Actuellement, laplupart des circuits électroniques dans les applications portables contiennent des convertisseursDC/DC conventionnels utilisant une inductance pour stocker transitoirement l’énergie électrique.L’inductance étant un composant passif difficilement intégrable, ces convertisseurs sontconnectés à l’extérieur de la puce. Une alternative aux convertisseurs conventionnels est leconvertisseur à capacités commutés, qui a l’avantage d’être facilement intégrable sur silicium.Toutefois, il présente des limitations à cause de la dépendance du facteur de conversion avec lenombre de condensateurs. De plus, les pertes inhérentes à la charge et à la décharge descondensateurs font diminuer son rendement. Il est donc intéressant de trouver une nouvellealternative pour concevoir un convertisseur DC/DC compact et performant afin d’obtenir un circuitélectronique complètement intégrable sur silicium.Le sujet de cette thèse répond au besoin d’une nouvelle méthode de conversion DC/DCintégrable sur silicium et à haut rendement. L’idée est d’utiliser une capacité variable mécaniquementà la place d’une inductance pour stocker l’énergie électrique transitoire. Le condensateur variable serafabriqué par des procédés de fabrication de microsystème MEMS sur silicium ce qui permet d’intégrerla totalité du convertisseur.Dans ce mémoire, nous expliquons tout d’abord le principe et le fonctionnement d’un abaisseur etd’un élévateur de tension utilisant notre nouvelle approche. Par la suite, nous présentons laconception et la fabrication d'un MEMS adapté à la conversion de tension. Finalement, nousexpliquons notre méthode de contrôle utilisant une commutation à zéro de tension. Le rendement d'unélévateur 10V-20V obtenu par simulation est de l’ordre de 88% lorsque la gestion électrique estréalisée avec des composants discrets. Ce rendement très prometteur, devrait être amélioré dans lefutur lorsque tout le système sera intégré sur silicium. / Current trends towards miniaturization of electronic circuits had led to the advent of System onChip containing different types of circuits indented to perform different functions. These sub-systemsrequire different supply voltages that are delivered from the SoC supply voltage using several DC/DCconverters. Currently, most of the electronic circuits of portable applications use conventional SMPS(switch mode power supply) DC/DC converters containing an inductor element to stock temporally theelectrical energy.In this case the converter is outside the chip since the integration of the inductor is very difficultand that resistive losses increase when the coil diameter decreases. The alternative to use switchedcapacitor converters, which can be easily integrated on silicon, presents some limitations because ofthe dependence of the required number of capacitors on the conversion ratio, and because ofswitching losses due to the charge and the discharge of the capacitors inducing a decrease of theconversion efficiency. For that reason, it is interesting to develop a new alternative that allows thefabrication of a compact and efficient DC/DC converter in order to get a completely integrated system.This thesis focuses on a novel solution based on electrostatic MEMS in order to make anintegrated DC/DC converter with high efficiency. A mechanically variable capacitor is used instead ofthe inductor element to store the transient electrical energy. The variable capacitor is fabricated byMEMS micromachining process techniques compatible with CMOS process integration.In this work, we explain the principle and the operation of a step down and a step-up converterusing our novel approach through an energetic analysis, we design a MEMS device optimized withrespect to the voltage conversion application, and we present our converter control method using azero voltage switching technique. An efficiency of almost 88% was obtained by simulation of a 10V-20V converter, when the power management circuitry was considered with discrete elements; thisefficiency is promising and could be improved when the whole system will be integrated on silicon.:
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Integrace pomocného zdroje do nákladního automobilu / Electrical integration of an auxiliary power units for truckPšenčík, Petr January 2014 (has links)
This thesis aims to hardware and software integration of solid oxide fuel cell into a power generator for truck application. Requirements for individual components are defined, especially for main DC/DC converter which allows charging the battery pack with output from fuel cell. Then suitable components are found on the market and incorporated into hardware layout. Operation strategy with safety concept is proposed and consequently integrated into PLC in LASAL Class 2 environment. This is followed by definition of future work which includes testing and possible changes in components. Result is hardware and software design which allows construction of prove-of-concept prototype.
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Alimentation haute fréquence à base de composants de puisance en Nitrure de Gallium / High frequency power supply based on GaN power devicesDelaine, Johan 14 April 2014 (has links)
Le projet de cette thèse est de réaliser un convertisseur DC/DC isolé à haute fréquence de découpage basé sur la mise en œuvre de composants en GaN. Le but est d'augmenter très fortement les densité de puissance commutées par rapport aux solutions actuelles. Cette thèse mets en oeuvre les composants GaN afin de déterminer les meilleurs conditions de fonctionnement possible. Une fois les points critiques mis en avant, on étudie les structures de circuit de commande adapté pour les HEMT GaN d'EPC et un circuit intégré pour la commande est étudié et mis en oeuvre. Le layout global de la carte a un rôle important en termes d'intégration et d'optimisation CEM, il est donc discuté et des règles de routage sont proposées. Enfin, on étudie plusieurs structures de puissance et on les met en oeuvre pour vérifier le bon fonctionnement et le respect du cahier des charges. / This study consist in the development of a high frequency insulated DC/DC converter based on GaN power devices. The goal is to increase significantly the power density in comparison with actual converter solutions. This thesis evaluate the GaN components performances to determine the best working conditions. Once the critical points highlighted, gate circuit topologies suitable for EPC GaN HEMT are studied and an integrated IC is designed and implemented. The overall layout of the card has an important role in terms of integration and EMC optimization, so it is discussed and routing rules are proposed. Finally, we study several power structures and implement them to verify proper operation and their compliance with specifications.
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