POWER CONVERTER POWER FACTOR CONTROL
20220399806 · 2022-12-15
Inventors
- Ignacio Castro (Gijon, ES)
- Ponggorn Kulsangcharoen (Solihull, GB)
- Rodrigo FERNANDEZ-MATTOS (Solihull, GB)
Cpc classification
H02M1/0009
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/44
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/12
ELECTRICITY
Y02B70/10
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
Abstract
A power factor correction circuit comprising: a global voltage input; and means for deriving a reference current from the global voltage; whereby the means for deriving the reference current comprises a leading phase admittance cancellation, LPAC, transfer function and a filter, whereby the reference current is derived from a sum of an output of the LPAC transfer function and an output of the filter.
Claims
1. A power factor correction circuit comprising: a global voltage input; and means for deriving a reference current from the global voltage; whereby the means for deriving the reference current comprises a leading phase admittance cancellation, LPAC, transfer function and a filter, whereby the reference current is derived from a sum of an output of the LPAC transfer function and an output of the filter.
2. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the filter is a notch filter;
3. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the filter is a low pass filter.
4. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the LPAC transfer function is provided at a summing junction with the filter.
5. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the LPAC transfer function is provided after a current loop transfer function.
6. A power converter comprising a voltage input and a voltage output and a power stage between the voltage input and the voltage output, and further comprising a power factor correction circuit as recited in claim 1.
7. A method of correcting a power factor in a power converter, the method comprising performing a leading phase admittance cancellation, LPAC function on a global voltage input and performing a filter function on the global voltage input, and deriving a reference current resulting from the sum of the LPAC function and the filter function.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] Preferred embodiments will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the drawings.
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] As described briefly above, conventionally, current control loops in power converters operate as modelled in
[0018] Proposals have been made to modify the current control loop to eliminate the cause of the leading phase distortion of the line current.
[0019] One example, as shown in
[0020] A new approach to eliminate current phase lead is the LPAC method mentioned above and represented in
[0021] The arrangement of the present disclosure modifies the LPAC arrangement as shown in
[0022] The theory of the additional filter will now be explained further with reference to
[0023] The arrangement of the disclosure starts from the power converter modified to incorporate the LPAC circuit as described above and as shown in
Where G.sub.iv(s)=1/(sL) and G.sub.id(s)=V.sub.o/(sL)
[0024] If the LPAC transfer function is correctly designed so that
[0025] Then the first term introduced by the input inductor will be cancelled by the addition of the last term, where H.sub.i is the current controller where the high frequency pole is neglected.
[0026] Therefore, the input impedance, after LPAC, can be represented by:
[0027] V.sub.c is the output of the voltage loop in the PFC and K.sub.x is the gain of the input voltage sensor, with the LPAC solution of
[0028] Whilst, as mentioned above, this does improve PFC over a greater range of frequencies, the system of the present disclosure acids the possibility of modifying the input impedance of the converter as required to improve its stability. The output impedance of the power converter filter must be lower than the impedance of the supply. It is therefore necessary to damp spikes in impedance to bring the system impedance close to the supply impedance. Adding damping components or the like, however, adds to the size and weight of the power converter.
[0029] Explained in more detail, for the stability criterion to be met, the PFC power converter can be modelled as a loop such that
where Z.sub.th(s)/Z.sub.in(s) is the ratio of impedances, Z.sub.th(s) being the source subsystem output impedance and Z.sub.in(s) being the load subsystem input impedance.
[0030] It can be seen, therefore, that for stability, the ratio of Z.sub.th to Z.sub.in must not be equal to −1. The values of Z.sub.th and Z.sub.in can, however, be varied to improve stability without adding passive components.
[0031] As can be seen from the above equation for the admittance of the LPAC PFC converter of
[0032] According to the disclosure, the impedance is modified, as shown in
[0033] If the input is to be modified by the filter, the filter needs to have the form:
[0034] As can be seen, a filter stage plus an extra term is required, where this extra term is the LPAC. Therefore, the filter can be designed such that Middlebrook's criterion is met.
[0035] Because the filter in the input voltage sensing path has no impact in the reference for the current loop, the introduction of the filter modifies the input impedance without incurring stability problems.
[0036] The modification of the PFC according to this disclosure can be realized with an analog filter applied to any available PFC ICs. One example is shown in
[0037] The present disclosure provides a PFC control solution by which input impedance modification can be passively achieved without the need for any additional measurement and without substantially increasing the size or weight of the system.
[0038] The arrangement can be implemented using a simple filter and can be applied to any PFC converter with multiplier based control.