FLYBACK CONVERTER WITH AUXILIARY WINDING VOLTAGE SENSING REFERRING TO CAPACITOR VOLTAGE
20220216798 · 2022-07-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R1/203
PHYSICS
H02M3/33507
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/0006
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/44
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/0025
ELECTRICITY
International classification
G01R1/20
PHYSICS
Abstract
An auxiliary winding for a flyback converter includes a floating terminal coupled to ground through a diode. A primary-side controller has a power supply voltage terminal coupled to a remaining terminal of the auxiliary winding and has a voltage sense terminal coupled to the floating terminal.
Claims
1. A flyback converter, comprising: a transformer including a primary winding, a secondary winding, and an auxiliary winding, the auxiliary winding having a first terminal and having a second terminal coupled to ground through a diode; and a primary-side controller having a power supply voltage terminal connected coupled to the first terminal of the auxiliary winding and having a voltage sense terminal coupled to the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
2. The flyback converter of claim 1, further comprising: a power switch coupled between ground and a first terminal of the primary winding; and a synchronous rectifier switch coupled to a first terminal of the secondary winding, the transformer being configured so that the first terminal of the auxiliary winding is homonymous with the first terminal of the primary winding and so that the second terminal of the auxiliary winding is homonymous with the first terminal of the secondary winding.
3. The flyback converter of claim 1, further comprising: a linear drop out regulator coupled between the first terminal of the auxiliary winding and the voltage sense terminal.
4. The flyback converter of claim 1, further comprising: a power supply voltage capacitor coupled between the first terminal of the auxiliary winding and ground.
5. The flyback converter of claim 1, further comprising: a resistor coupled between the second terminal of the auxiliary winding and the voltage sense terminal.
6. The flyback converter of claim 1, wherein a cathode of the diode connects to the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
7. The flyback converter of claim 6, further comprising: a resistor coupled between an anode of the diode and ground.
8. The flyback converter of claim 1, wherein the primary-side controller comprises: a voltage regulator configured to regulate the voltage sense terminal to have a constant voltage.
9. The flyback converter of claim 8, wherein the primary-side controller further comprises: a voltage generator configured to generate a first voltage responsive to an input current received over the voltage sense terminal; and a voltage processor configured to determine a DC offset voltage of the first voltage.
10. The flyback converter of claim 9, wherein the primary-side controller further comprises: an amplifier configured to amplify a difference between the first voltage and the DC offset voltage to provide a sensed voltage that is proportional to a voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
11. A method of operation for a flyback converter, comprising: through a first terminal of a primary-side controller coupled to a first terminal of an auxiliary winding, receiving a power supply voltage; through a second terminal of the primary-side controller, sensing a voltage of a second terminal of the auxiliary winding; and sensing an input voltage of the flyback converter from the sensing of the voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising: sensing an output voltage of the flyback converter from the sensing of the voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein sensing the voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding comprises: regulating a voltage of the second terminal of the primary-side controller to equal a constant value; generating a first voltage from an input current received through the second terminal of the primary-side controller; determining a DC offset voltage of the first voltage; and amplifying a difference between the first voltage and the DC offset voltage.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein regulating the voltage of the second terminal of the primary-side controller comprises controlling a conductance of a first transistor in series with a second transistor.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein sensing the voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding comprises: dividing the voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding to generate a first voltage at the second terminal of the primary-side controller; determining a DC offset voltage of the first voltage; and amplifying a difference between the first voltage and the DC offset voltage.
16. A primary-side controller for a flyback converter, comprising: a power supply voltage terminal configured to receive a power supply voltage from a first terminal of an auxiliary winding; a voltage sense terminal configured to receive an input current from a second terminal of the auxiliary winding; a voltage generator configured to generate a first voltage from the input current; a voltage processor configured to detect a DC offset voltage of the first voltage; and an amplifier configured to amplify a difference between the first voltage and the DC offset voltage to produce a sensed voltage that is proportional to a voltage of the second terminal of the auxiliary winding.
17. The primary-side controller of claim 16, further comprising: a voltage regulator configured to regulate a voltage of the voltage sense terminal to equal a constant value.
18. The primary-side controller of claim 17, further comprising: a first transistor coupled between the power supply voltage terminal and the voltage sense terminal; and a second transistor coupled between the voltage sense terminal and ground, wherein the voltage regulator is further configured to regulate the voltage of the voltage sense terminal by controlling a gate voltage of the first transistor and a gate voltage of the second transistor.
19. The primary-side controller of claim 18, wherein the voltage generator comprises a sense resistor, and wherein the second transistor is configured to couple to ground through the sense resistor.
20. The primary-side controller of claim 18, wherein the first transistor is an NMOS transistor and wherein the second transistor is a PMOS transistor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015]
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[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Embodiments of the present disclosure and their advantages are best understood by referring to the detailed description that follows. It should be appreciated that like reference numerals are used to identify like elements illustrated in one or more of the figures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] To reduce the EMI that results from conventional transformer architectures, a flyback winding with an improved auxiliary winding architecture is provided. An example flyback converter 300 is shown in
[0024] When the power switch transistor M1 is cycled on, a primary winding current begins to flow through the primary winding W1 and the power switch transistor M1 into ground. The primary-side controller U1 may sense the primary winding current through an Isense terminal connected to a sense resistor Rs that connects between the power switch transistor M1 and ground. Once a desired peak winding current has been reached, the primary-side controller U1 may then cycle off the power switch transistor M1. As used herein, “connected” refers to a direct electrical connection such as through a conducting lead whereas “coupled” refers to an electrical connection in which the connection may be through an intervening element such as a resistor or a diode.
[0025] A secondary-side controller U2 controls a synchronous rectifier (SR) switch transistor that couples between a return output terminal and the secondary winding W2 in response to monitoring a drain-to-source voltage (Vds) across the SR switch transistor. Based upon the drain-to-source voltage Vds, the SR controller detects whether the power switch transistor M1 has cycled off so that the SR switch transistor may be switched on to allow the secondary winding current to flow and charge an output voltage Vout that is supported by an output capacitor Cout.
[0026] In contrast to flyback converter 100, there is no diode intervening between the terminal A of the auxiliary winding in improved flyback converter 300 and a VCC terminal of the primary-side controller U1. A power supply capacitor (CVCC) supports the power supply voltage VCC that develops at the VCC terminal. In further contrast to flyback converter 100, the primary-side controller U1 in improved flyback converter 300 has a Vsense terminal that senses the terminal C voltage of the auxiliary winding. For example, the Vsense terminal of the primary-side controller U1 may couple to terminal C of the auxiliary winding through a resistor Rvs. A cathode of a diode D2 connects to terminal C. An anode of diode D2 connects to ground. Terminal A of the auxiliary winding remains homonymous with terminal D of the primary winding W1. Similarly, terminal A remains homonymous with the output terminal of the secondary winding W2. But note that floating and non-floating relationships of terminals A and C are reversed in improved flyback converter 300 as compared to flyback converter 100. In particular, terminal C is now floating whereas terminal A is non-floating.
[0027] Some voltage waveforms for flyback converter 300 are shown in
[0028] As noted earlier, the terminal A voltage in flyback converter 300 is no longer floating. Instead, the terminal A voltage equals the power supply voltage VCC across the power switch cycles. The power supply voltage VCC is stored by the power supply capacitor CVCC and functions as the power supply voltage for the primary-side controller U1. The floating terminal S voltage waveform remains as discussed for
[0029] Terminal C is no longer grounded but instead is the floating terminal for the auxiliary winding. Prior to the power switch on-time period beginning at time t0, the terminal C voltage equals the power supply voltage VCC but is then asserted high at time t0 to equal a sum of Vin/Npa and the power supply voltage VCC, where Vin is the input voltage and Npa is the primary-winding-to-auxiliary-winding turns ratio. After the power switch transistor M1 cycles off at time t2 and the secondary winding current gradually declines until it is exhausted at the transformer reset time, the terminal C voltage is clamped at approximately −0.7V below ground by the diode D2. Following the transformer reset time, the terminal C voltage resonantly oscillates until it subsides to ground.
[0030] As shown in
[0031] Turning now to
[0032] The voltage across the auxiliary winding is equal to the difference between the Va and Vm voltages. The Va voltage (which may be equal to the power supply voltage VCC in embodiments in which LDO 525 is absent) is constant whereas the Vm voltage varies across the power switch cycle. The auxiliary winding may be regarded to function as an inductor that is subject to the volt-second balance principle. Thus, the Va voltage may be deemed to form the DC offset for the Vm voltage. To sense the Vm voltage, primary-side controller U1 includes a voltage generator 510 that generates a voltage Vs responsive to the input current Ivsns. The voltage Vs is proportional to Vm but with a smaller amplitude and a different DC offset voltage Vr. A voltage processor 515 detects the DC offset Vr so that an amplifier 520 may amplify the difference (Vs−Vr) to produce a sensed voltage Vsns that is proportional to the absolute value of the difference (Vm−Va). The DC offset of the sensed voltage Vsns is zero. In some embodiments, amplifier 520 may be a differentiator amplifier.
[0033] Referring again to
[0034] A primary-side controller U1 (600) is shown in more detail in
[0035] In alternate embodiments for the primary-side controller U1, the voltage regulator 505 may be eliminated such that the Vsense terminal voltage is unregulated. An example primary-side controller 700 along with its connections to the auxiliary winding are shown in
[0036] Those of some skill in this art will by now appreciate that many modifications, substitutions and variations can be made in and to the materials, apparatus, configurations and methods of use of the devices of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof. In light of this, the scope of the present disclosure should not be limited to that of the particular embodiments illustrated and described herein, as they are merely by way of some examples thereof, but rather, should be fully commensurate with that of the claims appended hereafter and their functional equivalents.