POWER CONVERTER WITH ADAPTIVE ACTIVE CLAMP
20230056711 · 2023-02-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M1/083
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/33507
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/32
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
H02M1/08
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An active-clamp flyback converter is provided with improved active-clamp switch control that switches on an active-clamp switch at an active-clamp switch on-time that equals a power switch on-time minus a peak charge time for an active-clamp capacitor. The peak charge time is the duration between the switching off of the power switch transistor and when the charging current through the active-clamp capacitor falls to zero. The controller measures this peak charge time following the switching off of the power switch transistor and then applies it to the subsequent switching on of the active-clamp switch so that the active-clamp switch is switched on at the power switch on-time minus the peak charge time.
Claims
1. An active-clamp flyback converter, comprising: a power switch; an active-clamp switch; an active-clamp capacitor in series with the active-clamp switch; and an active-clamp controller configured to measure a peak charge time of the active-clamp capacitor and to switch on the active-clamp switch at a time equaling a difference between a turn-on time for the power switch and the peak charge time.
2. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 1, wherein the active-clamp controller is configured to measure the peak charge time of the active-clamp capacitor at a startup of the active-clamp flyback converter.
3. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 1, wherein the active-clamp switch is a PMOS transistor having a source coupled to a first plate of the active-clamp capacitor.
4. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 3, wherein the power switch is an NMOS transistor having a drain coupled to a primary winding of a transformer, and wherein a second plate of the active-clamp capacitor is coupled to the drain of the NMOS transistor.
5. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 3, wherein the PMOS transistor includes a body diode configured to conduct a charging current following an off-time of the power switch.
6. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 1, wherein the active-clamp controller is further configured to switch on the active-clamp switch for the peak charge time in response to a switch off of the power switch.
7. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 3, wherein a drain of the PMOS transistor is coupled to ground through an active-clamp resistor.
8. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 7, wherein the active-clamp controller includes: a comparator configured to compare a voltage across the active-clamp resistor to a threshold voltage; and a counter configured to provide a count representing the peak charge time, the counter being further configured to stop a counting of the count in response to an output signal from the comparator indicating that the voltage across the active-clamp resistor equals the threshold voltage.
9. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 8, wherein the threshold voltage is ground.
10. The active-clamp flyback converter of claim 8, wherein the counter is further configured to begin a counting of the count responsive to the power switch cycling off.
11. A method of operation for an active-clamp flyback converter, comprising: measuring a peak charge time period during which an active-clamp capacitor charges to a peak charge in response to a switching off of a power switch transistor; during an off-time of the power switch transistor after the active-clamp capacitor is charged to the peak charge, switching on an active-clamp switch transistor at an active-clamp on-time that equals a difference between a subsequent power switch on-time of the power switch transistor and the peak charge time period; switching off the active-clamp switch transistor at an active-clamp off-time that equals the active-clamp on-time plus the peak charge time period; and switching on the power switch transistor at the subsequent power switch on-time.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein charging the active-clamp capacitor to the peak charge over the peak charge time period comprises conducting a charging current through a body diode of the active-clamp switch transistor while the active-clamp switch transistor is off
13. The method of claim 11, wherein charging the active-clamp capacitor to the peak charge over the peak charge time period comprises switching on the active-clamp switch transistor for the peak charge time period.
14. (canceled)
15. The method of claim 11, wherein measuring the peak charge time period comprises determining when a charging current stops conducting through the active-clamp capacitor.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein determining when the charging current stops conducting comprises comparing a voltage across an active-clamp resistor to a threshold voltage.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the threshold voltage is approximately zero volts.
18. An active-clamp controller for an active-clamp flyback converter, comprising: a comparator configured to compare a voltage across an active-clamp resistor to a threshold voltage; a counter configured to provide a count representing a peak charge time of an active-clamp capacitor, the counter being further configured to stop a counting of the count in response to an output signal from the comparator indicating that the voltage across the active-clamp resistor equals the threshold voltage; and an active-clamp switch transistor gate driver configured to switch on an active-clamp switch transistor at an active-clamp on-time that equals an on-time of a power switch transistor minus the peak charge time.
19. The active-clamp controller of claim 18, wherein the counter is further configured to begin the counting of the count responsive to a cycling on of the power switch transistor at a startup of the active-clamp flyback converter.
20. The active-clamp controller of claim 19, wherein the counter is configured to increment the count responsive to cycles of a clock signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0024] 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
[0025] A flyback converter is provided that measures the peak charge time of the active clamp capacitor to provide improved active-clamp switch control. The peak charge time is also denoted as a peak charge period herein. The peak charge time of the active-clamp capacitor will tend to vary from flyback converter to flyback converter. To account for this variability, the peak charge time may be measured at startup and re-calibrated if necessary during operation. Referring again to
[0026] An example active-clamp switch controller (Uclamp) in a flyback converter 500 is shown in
[0027] But energy was also stored in the leakage inductance (Ileakage) of the primary winding W1 while the power switch transistor was on. Since the leakage inductance is not magnetically coupled to the secondary winding W1, this stored energy could charge a parasitic capacitance (Cparasitic) of the power switch transistor to a potentially-damaging voltage in the absence of the active-clamp switch and the active-clamp capacitor when the power switch transistor M1 switches off. But this leakage energy is instead captured in the active-clamp capacitor by charging the active-clamp capacitor to its peak charge in the peak charge time after the power switch transistor cycles off. In particular, the active-clamp controller may receive a control signal 505 that identifies when the power switch transistor M1 is switched off. Note that the active-clamp controller and the primary-side controller are shown separately for illustration purposes but may be integrated into a single controller integrated circuit in some embodiments. Since the primary-side controller is driving the gate of the power switch transistor to switch the power switch transistor on and discharging the gate to switch the power switch transistor off, this control information is readily signaled to the active-clamp controller as control signal 505. When control signal 505 alerts the active-clamp controller that the power switch transistor is switching off, the active-clamp controller may switch on the active-clamp switch to conduct a charging current for the peak charge time so that the leakage energy charges the active-clamp capacitor to its peak charge. At the expiration of the peak charge time, the active-clamp controller may then switch off the active-clamp switch so that the active-clamp capacitor retains its peak charge.
[0028] The peak charge time is again used during the cycling on of the power switch transistor. The on-time of the power switch transistor M1 depends upon the modulation of the power switch transistor M1 by the primary-side controller. In a pulse-width modulation (PWM), the on-time is typically fixed such as controlled by a clock signal. It is just the off time that is varied in PWM such that the appropriate duty cycle may be employed to keep the load in regulation. In a pulse-frequency modulation (PFM), the on-time of the power switch transistor may vary depending upon the cycling frequency of the power switch transistor Ml. Regardless of whether the modulation is PWM or PFM (or some other suitable modulation), the on-time of the power switch transistor M1 is known and may be signaled to the active-clamp controller through control signal 505. Should the on-time be scheduled for a time t.sub.on, the active-clamp controller functions to switch on the active-clamp switch at an active-clamp on-time equaling the power switch on-time t.sub.on minus the peak charge time. This cycling on of the active-clamp switch S causes the stored energy in the active-clamp capacitor to conduct a discharge current into the primary winding so as to discharge the drain of the power switch transistor M1 towards ground.
[0029] Some example operating waveforms for flyback converter 500 are shown in
[0030] Note that the waveforms shown in
[0031] The active-clamp switch may be implemented using a PMOS transistor P1 as shown for a flyback converter 700 of
[0032] Although the active-clamp flyback converters disclosed herein such as active-clamp flyback converters 500 and 700 use a “low-side” active-clamp switch, the adaptive active-clamp switching control disclosed herein is also applicable to “high-side” active-clamp switch topologies in which the active-clamp switch and the active-clamp capacitor couple from the drain of the power switch transistor to the input voltage rail for the input voltage Vin. In contrast, the serial combination of the active-clamp capacitor and the active-clamp switch couple from the drain of the power switch transistor to ground in low-side active-clamp topologies.
[0033] There are numerous ways that an active-clamp controller may detect the peak charge time. For example, as shown in
[0034] Some operating waveforms for flyback converter 700 are shown in
[0035] The waveforms shown in
[0036] A flowchart shown in
[0037] As those of some skill in this art will by now appreciate and depending on the particular application at hand, 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.