INTEGRATED ON-BOARD CHARGER AND AUXILIARY POWER MODULE USING A TRIPLE ACTIVE BRIDGE FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
20230223840 · 2023-07-13
Inventors
- Liyan Zhu (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Alan W. Brown (Canton, MI, US)
- Hua Bai (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Lukas Michael Keuck (Paderborn, DE)
Cpc classification
H02M3/33573
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/72
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B60L53/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T90/14
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H02M7/003
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B60L58/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02M1/10
ELECTRICITY
B60L1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/7072
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H02M1/42
ELECTRICITY
H02M7/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A power conversion system including a triple active bridge (TAB) is provided. The system includes a power factor correction (PFC) module and a three port converter (TPC) module, with no post-regulation or additional stages required. The TPC module includes an OBC full-bridge and an APM full-bridge, each being inductively coupled to the output of the PFC full-bridge, thereby forming the TAB. The OBC full-bridge is adapted to convert an AC input into a high-voltage DC output for a high-voltage battery, and the APM full-bridge is adapted to convert an AC input into a low-voltage DC output for a low-voltage battery. The power conversion system can accept a single-phase AC input and a three-phase AC input, has a lower current stress as compared to prior art TPCs, and freely transfers power from among any ports.
Claims
1. A power conversion system comprising: a power factor correction module including a power factor correction rectifier, the power factor correction rectifier being adapted to convert a single-phase AC or a three-phase AC into a voltage regulated DC-bus voltage; and a three-port converter module including a voltage-fed primary-side full bridge, a current-fed on-board charger full bridge, and a current-fed auxiliary power module full bridge, the three-port converter including a three-winding transformer having a first winding electrically connected to the primary-side full-bridge, a second winding electrically connected to the on-board charger full-bridge, and a third winding electrically connected to the auxiliary power module full-bridge, thereby forming a triple-active-bridge; wherein the primary-side full bridge is electrically connected to the DC-bus voltage, the on-board charger full-bridge is adapted to convert an AC output of the second winding into a first DC voltage for a high-voltage battery at a first output port, and the auxiliary power module full-bridge is adapted to convert an AC output of the third winding into a second DC voltage for a low-voltage battery, the first DC voltage being greater than the second DC voltage, the three-port converter module further including a first switch adapted to switch between a voltage-fed output and a current-fed output at the first output port, such that the three-port converter module comprises a dual output DC-DC converter that is operable to simultaneously charge the high-voltage battery coupled to the on-board charger full-bridge and the low-voltage battery coupled to the auxiliary power module full-bridge.
2. The power conversion system of claim 1 wherein the power factor correction rectifier includes a six-switch boost converter topology for rectification and power factor correction.
3. The power conversion system of claim 1 wherein the second winding and the third winding each comprise a tank circuit having a resonant inductor.
4. The power conversion system of claim 1 wherein the three-port converter module includes a second output port for the low-voltage battery.
5. The power conversion system of claim 4 further including a first low-pass filter comprising first and second smoothing inductors and a filter capacitor connected between the on-board charger full bridge and the first output port.
6. The power conversion system of claim 5 further including a second low-pass filter comprising first and second smoothing inductors and a filter capacitor connected between the auxiliary power module full bridge and the second output port.
7. The power conversion system of claim 5 further including: a high-voltage clamp capacitor that is parallel-connected to the on-board charger full bridge; and a low-voltage clamp capacitor that is parallel-connected to the auxiliary power module full bridge.
8. The power conversion system of claim 7 wherein the first switch is connected between the high-voltage clamp capacitor and the first output port.
9. The power conversion system of claim 8 further including a second switch between the low-voltage clamp capacitor and the second output port, the second switch being adapted to switch between a voltage-fed output and a current-fed output at the second output port.
10. The power conversion system of claim 9 wherein the first switch and the second switch are double-throw switches.
11. The power conversion system of claim 1 wherein the second winding includes a turn ratio relative to the first winding that is different than the third winding.
12. The power conversion system of claim 1 wherein the auxiliary power module full-bridge is coupled to a second output port and a third output port, the second output port providing a DC output voltage greater than a DC output voltage provided by the third output port.
13. The power conversion system of claim 12 wherein the second output port is parallel connected to a clamp capacitor that is coupled across an output of the auxiliary power module full-bridge.
14. The power conversion system of claim 13 wherein the third output port is parallel connected to a low pass filter coupled across an output of the auxiliary power module full-bridge.
15. The power conversion system of claim 1 where the three-port converter module is adapted to simultaneously charge the high-voltage battery and the low-voltage battery.
16. A power conversion system comprising: a converter module including a primary-side full bridge and an on-board charger full bridge, the converter including a transformer having a first winding electrically connected to the primary-side full-bridge and a second winding electrically connected to the on-board charger full-bridge; wherein the primary-side full bridge is electrically connected to a DC-bus voltage, and wherein the on-board charger full-bridge is adapted to convert an AC output of the second winding into a DC voltage at an output port for a high-voltage battery, the converter module further including a switch adapted to switch between a voltage-fed mode and a current-fed mode for providing a first voltage output and a second voltage output at the output port.
17. The power conversion system of claim 16 wherein the first winding and the second winding each comprise a tank circuit having a resonant inductor.
18. The power conversion system of claim 16 further including a low-pass filter comprising first and second smoothing inductors and a filter capacitor connected between the on-board charger full bridge and the output port
19. The power conversion system of claim 16 further including a high-voltage clamp capacitor that is parallel-connected to the on-board charger full bridge.
20. The power conversion system of claim 19 wherein the switch is a double-throw switch connected between the high-voltage clamp capacitor and the output port.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE CURRENT EMBODIMENT
[0019] As discussed herein, the power conversion system of the present invention includes an integrated on-board charger (OBC) and auxiliary power module (APM) (i.e., the OBC and APM are physically integrated into the same housing) using a triple-active-bridge (TAB). To provide the TAB, and as shown in
[0020] More specifically, the PFC module 12 provides rectification and power factor correction and for a single-phase AC input and a three-phase AC input. As shown in
[0021] As also shown in
[0022] As noted above, the PFC module 12 includes a PFC rectifier 22 that provides a regulated voltage to the primary-side full-bridge 24, while the OBC full-bridge 36 is current fed and the APM full-bridge 38 is current fed. To provide a regulated DC-bus voltage, a controller provides open loop, feedforward control of switches Q1-Q8 as a voltage-source inverter. When assigning the appropriate duty cycle to the APM full-bridge 38 on the secondary side, the ratio of the PFC-side DC-bus voltage over V.sub.Chv and V.sub.Clv can be made equal to the related transformer turn ratio. For example, if the transformer turn ratio is 20:20:1 and the primary side PFC DC-bus voltage is 800V and the low voltage battery 20 is only 10V, the duty cycle of S22 and S24 can be 75%, thereby boosting V.sub.Clv to 40V thereby still securing transformer terminal voltage ratio equal to the turn ratio. Simulated waveforms of the low-voltage full-bridge are shown in
[0023] As also shown in
[0024] As optionally shown in
[0025] The above description is that of current embodiment of the invention. Various alterations and changes can be made without departing from the spirit and broader aspects of the invention. This disclosure is presented for illustrative purposes and should not be interpreted as an exhaustive description of all embodiments of the invention or to limit the scope of the claims to the specific elements illustrated or described in connection with these embodiments. Any reference to elements in the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” or “said,” is not to be construed as limiting the element to the singular.