LAMINATED MAGNETIC CORES
20200335275 ยท 2020-10-22
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01F41/32
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
The subject matter described herein relates to laminated magnetic cores, methods of fabricating laminated magnetic cores, and electric devices using laminated magnetic cores. In some examples, a method for fabricating a laminated magnetic core includes depositing a first magnetic layer and depositing an interlamination layer of over the first magnetic layer. The interlamination layer comprises a partially conducting material having a conductivity greater than or equal to 10.sup.4 S/cm and less than or equal to 10.sup.5 S/cm. The method includes depositing a second magnetic layer over the interlamination layer. The method can include sequentially depositing additional interlamination layers and additional magnetic layers in an alternating fashion to produce the laminated magnetic core.
Claims
1. A laminated magnetic core comprising: a plurality of magnetic layers; and a plurality of interlamination layers disposed between the magnetic layers in an alternating fashion; wherein the interlamination layers comprise a partially conducting material having a conductivity greater than or equal to 10.sup.4 S/cm and less than or equal to 10.sup.5 S/cm.
2. The laminated magnetic core of claim 1, wherein the magnetic layers comprise a magnetic alloy.
3. The laminated magnetic core of claim 1, wherein the partially conducting material is a conductive polymer.
4. The laminated magnetic core of claim 3, wherein the conductive polymer is polypyrrole.
5. The laminated magnetic core of claim 1, wherein the magnetic layers each have a thickness less than or equal to 10 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m.
6. The laminated magnetic core of claim 5, wherein the interlamination layers each have a thickness less than or equal to 1 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m.
7. A method for fabricating a laminated magnetic core, the method comprising: depositing a first magnetic layer; depositing an interlamination layer over the first magnetic layer, wherein the interlamination layer comprises a partially conducting material having a conductivity greater than or equal to 10.sup.4 S/cm and less than or equal to 10.sup.5 S/cm; and depositing a second magnetic layer over the interlamination layer.
8. The method of claim 7, comprising preparing a seed layer on a substrate and depositing the first magnetic layer on the seed layer.
9. The method of claim 7, comprising sequentially depositing a plurality of additional interlamination layers and a plurality of additional magnetic layers in an alternating fashion to produce the laminated magnetic core.
10. The method of claim 9, comprising defining a lateral extent of the laminated magnetic core by top-down machining after completing deposition or bottom-up through-mold electrodeposition using a mold material that is intact throughout deposition.
11. The method of claim 9, comprising rinsing and drying the laminated magnetic core.
12. The method of claim 9, comprising applying one or more processes that reduce the interlamination layer conductivity.
13. The method of claim 7, wherein the partially conducting material comprises a conductive polymer, and wherein depositing the interlamination layer comprises anodic electropolymerization of the conductive polymer.
14. The method of claim 7, wherein the partially conducting material comprises a conductive polymer, and wherein depositing the interlamination layer comprises dip, spin, or spray coating the conductive polymer.
15. The method of claim 7, wherein the first and second magnetic layers comprise a magnetic alloy, and wherein depositing the first and second magnetic layers comprises cathodic electrodeposition of the magnetic alloy.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein depositing each of the first and second magnetic layers comprises pre-electrodeposition of a conductive, low deposition potential metal film having a thickness less than a thickness of the first and second magnetic layers.
17. The method of claim 7 comprising applying a magnetic field during deposition of the first magnetic layer or the second magnetic layer or both.
18. A switched-mode power converter comprising: an input, an output, a switch coupled to the output; a magnetic energy storage element coupled between the input and the switch; and a switch controller configured to modulate the switch at a frequency exceeding 0.1 MHz; wherein the magnetic energy storage element comprises a laminated magnetic core comprising: a plurality of magnetic layers; and a plurality of interlamination layers disposed between the magnetic layers in an alternating fashion; wherein the interlamination layers comprise a partially conducting material having a conductivity greater than or equal to 10.sup.4 S/cm and less than or equal to 10.sup.5 S/cm.
19. The switched-mode power converter of claim 18, wherein the magnetic layers comprise a magnetic alloy, and wherein the partially conducting material is a conductive polymer.
20. The switched-mode power converter of claim 18, the magnetic layers each have a thickness less than or equal to 10 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m, and wherein the interlamination layers each have a thickness less than or equal to 1 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m.
21. The switched-mode power converter of claim 18, wherein the switch controller is configured to operate the switched-mode power converter as a DC-DC converter and to regulate an output voltage at the output
22. An inductor comprising the laminated magnetic core of claim 1.
23. A transformer comprising the laminated magnetic core of claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0015]
[0016] In some examples, magnetic layers 102 and 104 are formed of a soft magnetic alloy, e.g., Ni, Fe, NiFe, NiFeCo, or similar materials, and interlamination layers 106 and 108 are formed of a material of significantly smaller electrical conductivity such as conductive polymers, e.g., polypyrrole. In some examples, magnetic layers 102 and 104 each have a thickness less than or equal to 10 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m, and interlamination layers 106 and 108 each have a thickness less than or equal to 1 m and greater than or equal to 0.1 m.
[0017]
[0018] In some examples, the skin depth and the conductivities of the layers can be used as follows:
where f is the operating frequency in Hz, is the layer permeability in H/m, .sub.m is the conductivity of the material of interest in S/m, and is the skin depth in m. Typical conductivities of metallic magnetic materials might be on the order of 10.sup.5 S/cm, while typical conductivities of conventional insulating materials for interlamination layers might be as low as the order of 10.sup.16 S/cm, and conductivities of partially insulating interlamination layers might range from 10.sup.4 S/cm up to conductivities approaching that of metallic magnetic materials.
[0019] The advantages of laminated magnetic core 100 compared to conventional laminations with conventionally insulating interlamination layers can include (1) uncompromised high frequency performance (2) at reduced fabrication complexity.
[0020] The conductivity of interlamination layers 106 and 108 is balanced so that it is (1) sufficiently high for a subsequent electrodeposition of the desired magnetic material on the interlamination layer, yet (2) sufficiently low compared to the magnetic material to suppress the interlamination conduction to a proper level; hence, the fabrication of the laminated alloys is simplified to sequential electrodeposition of magnetic layers and partially-conducting interlamination layers. The total eddy current losses within such laminated materials can be suppressed to a desired level, e.g., the level of the hysteresis losses of the magnetic layers, i.e., the losses due to the magnetization process intrinsic to the magnetic material. Laminated magnetic core 100 provides a simple, cost-effective and environment-friendly fabrication approach toward the batch-scale realization of laminated magnetic alloys with nearly uncompromised performances.
[0021] Method 200 includes preparation of a seed layer (201). Method 200 includes anodic electropolymerization of a desired conductive polymer followed by cathodic electrodeposition of a desired metal (such as a magnetic material), or vice versa (202). In some examples, a magnetic layer is deposited over the seed layer, e.g., as shown in
[0022] The seed layer, on which the laminated magnetic alloys are synthesized, is prepared on an arbitrary substrate. The seed layer can be metal (e.g. gold, silver, nickel, copper, aluminum, zinc, iron) as well as non-metal (e.g. indium tin oxide (ITO), graphite, graphene, carbonized SU-8 epoxy, highly doped silicon), as long as its conductivity is sufficient to perform step 2. The seed layer can be prepared by various means including both physical deposition (e.g. sputtering, evaporation) and chemical deposition (e.g. electroless deposition).
[0023] The electropolymerization of a conductive polymer is performed in an aqueous bath where a proper amount of the monomers of the desired polymers and salts are dissolved. Various monomers (e.g. 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene (EDOT), aniline, and pyrrole) can be used to synthesize respective polymers (e.g., poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT), polyaniline, and polypyrrole). Note that the choice of both monomers and salts is appropriate for method 200 when the conductivity of the deposited polymer is balanced so that the interlamination layer conductivities are sufficiently high to enable the electrodeposition of magnetic layers, and yet sufficiently low to suppress the interlamination conduction within the laminated structure (or, alternatively, can be made low by post-deposition treatment).
[0024] An anodic potential during the electropolymerization might lead to an undesirable corrosion of the underlying layer (i.e. metallic seed layer or electrodeposited metallic magnetic layers); specific salts (e.g. sodium oxalate, sodium tartrate, sodium saccharin, sodium salicylate) that are co-dissolved in the bath may help creating a passivation layer on the substrate during the first few seconds of the polymerization, which inhibits the substrate corrosion. As an alternative to conducting polymer electrodeposition, other deposition techniques, such as dip, spin, or spray coating, could be used to deposit the desired conducting polymer.
[0025] The cathodic electrodeposition of a desired metal is performed on the deposited conductive polymer layer. Various common soft magnetic metal alloys (e.g. Ni alloys such as NiFe, CoNiFe, NiFeMo) can be directly deposited on the polymer layer using appropriately-designed electrolyte baths and deposition conditions; however, for some metals, their relatively high cathodic deposition potential may attract significant amount of the dissolved anion to the polymer network, expanding the volume of the polymer matrix that leads to an undesirable film delamination during the deposition. This issue can be resolved by pre-electrodeposition of a low deposition potential metal film (e.g. copper, nickel) with a thickness much smaller than the lamination thickness.
[0026]
[0027] Large numbers of laminated magnetic alloys with desired individual layer thicknesses can be created. The lateral extent of the laminated alloys can be defined either by top-down machining (e.g. laser cutting) post deposition, or bottom-up through-mold electrodeposition using an appropriate mold material that is intact throughout the multilayer deposition (e.g. SU-8 or other photoresists). Any polymer degradation processes (such as oxidative degradation processes at elevated temperatures, or solvent-induced degradation processes) that lead to the decrease of the conductivity of the deposited polymer may follow as long as the magnetic properties of the deposited magnetic alloys are not substantially negatively impacted.
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034] Switched-mode power converter 520 includes a switch 526 and inductor 500 coupled between the input and switch 526. Switched-mode power converter 520 also includes a switch controller 530 configured to modulate switch 526 at a frequency exceeding 0.1 MHz (for example, at a frequency in the range between 0.1 MHz and 10 MHz, or up to higher frequencies such as 40 MHz and, in some examples, up to 100 MHz). Switch controller 530 can be configured to operate switched-mode power converter 520 as a DC-DC converter and to regulate an output voltage to load 524.
[0035] Accordingly, while the methods, systems, and computer readable media have been described herein in reference to specific embodiments, features, and illustrative embodiments, it will be appreciated that the utility of the subject matter is not thus limited, but rather extends to and encompasses numerous other variations, modifications and alternative embodiments, as will suggest themselves to those of ordinary skill in the field of the present subject matter, based on the disclosure herein.
[0036] Various combinations and sub-combinations of the structures and features described herein are contemplated and will be apparent to a skilled person having knowledge of this disclosure. Any of the various features and elements as disclosed herein may be combined with one or more other disclosed features and elements unless indicated to the contrary herein. Correspondingly, the subject matter as hereinafter claimed is intended to be broadly construed and interpreted, as including all such variations, modifications and alternative embodiments, within its scope and including equivalents of the claims.
[0037] It is understood that various details of the presently disclosed subject matter may be changed without departing from the scope of the presently disclosed subject matter. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limitation.