Electronic circuit with a current ripple filter
09971315 · 2018-05-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E40/40
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
H02H3/00
ELECTRICITY
H01H47/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An electronic circuit comprising an ACRF comprising an active component, an energy storage unit, an input port and an output port. The electronic circuit comprises a control unit to control the ACRF. A detector detects a short circuit at the input port or the absence of an energy supply at the input port. The control unit controls the ACRF to function as an ACRF if the detector detects a power supply connected to the input port or that there is no short circuit at the input port, and controls the ACRF to stop functioning as an ACRF and to discharge energy from its energy storage unit to its output port if the detector detects a short circuit at the input port or no power supply connected to the input port.
Claims
1. An electronic circuit comprising: an active current ripple filter (ACRF), the ACRF comprising one or more active components and an energy storage unit, and an input port and an output port, a control unit connected to and arranged for the control of the ACRF, a first detector connected to the control unit and arranged to detect a short circuit at the ACRF's input port or the absence of an energy supply at the ACRF's input port, the control unit being arranged to control the ACRF to function as an ACRF if the first detector detects that there is a power supply connected to the ACRF's input port or that there is no short circuit at the ACRF's input port, wherein functioning as an ACRF means regulating an output current level at the input port, the control unit being arranged to control the ACRF to stop functioning as an ACRF and to discharge energy from its energy storage unit to its output port if the first detector detects that there is a short circuit at the ACRF's input port or that there is no power supply connected to the ACRF's input port, wherein the energy storage unit includes a capacitor, the ACRF further comprising a first transistor and a second transistor connected in parallel with the capacitor.
2. The electronic circuit of claim 1, further comprising a second detector for measuring an amplitude of a current at the ACRF's input port, said second detector being connected to the control unit, the control unit being arranged to control the level of a current at the ACRF's output port based on the measurements from the second detector when the ACRF is controlled to function as an ACRF.
3. An electronic circuit comprising: an input port comprising two connections between which a voltage may be applied; an output port comprising two connections between which a voltage may appear; an active current ripple filter (ACRF), the ACRF including: a first FET transistor and a second FET transistor, wherein a drain of the first FET transistor is connected to a source of the second FET transistor; an energy store capacitor, wherein the first and second FET transistors are connected in parallel to the energy store capacitor; and an inductor having first and second ends, wherein the first tend of the inductor is connected between the drain of the first FET transistor and the source of the second FET transistor and the second end of the inductor is connected to one of the two connections of the output port; a first detector for detecting voltage, the first detector located between the input port and the ACRF; a second detector for detecting current, the second detector located between the first detector and the ACRF; a ripple filter capacitor located between the first detector and the second detector and for filtering frequencies above a threshold frequency; and a digital switch-mode controller (DSMC) connected to the ACRF, wherein the DSMC is configured to: 1) control the ACRF to inject current if a current at the input port is detected to increase at more than a first rate; 2) control the ACRF to sink current if the current at the input port is detected to decrease at more than a second rate; and 3) control the ACRF to act as an Automatic Hold Up (AHU) instead of as an ACRF if the first detector detects that there is a short circuit at the ACRF's input port or that there is no power supply connected to the ACRF's input port is detected.
4. The electronic circuit of claim 3, wherein the control unit is configured to inject current by increasing a duty cycle of the second FET transistor and decreasing a duty cycle of the first FET transistor, thereby causing current from the ACRF, through the inductor, to increase.
5. The electronic circuit of claim 3, wherein the control unit is configured to sink current by decreasing a duty cycle of the second transistor and increasing a duty cycle of the first transistor, thereby causing current into the ACRF, through the inductor, to increase.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be described in more detail in the following, with reference to the appended drawings, in which
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) Embodiments of the present invention will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. The invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as being limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Like numbers in the drawings refer to like elements throughout.
(6) The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the invention.
(7)
(8) As is also shown in
(9) There is also comprised a Control Unit 105 in the electronic circuit 100, arranged to control the function of the ACRF 110.
(10) In addition, the electronic circuit 100 comprises a first detector 115 which is arranged to detect a short circuit at the input port 101 and to also detect the absence of an energy supply unit at the input port 101. The first detector is connected to the control unit 105, so that the control unit 105 can notice a short circuit at the input port 101 as well as the absence of an energy supply unit at the input port 101.
(11) If the detector 115 detects a short circuit at the input port 101 or the absence of an energy supply unit at the input port 101, the control unit 105 is arranged to control the ACRF to stop functioning as an ACRF, i.e. to stop regulating the level of the output current at the input port 101, and to instead start discharging energy from the energy supply 104 to the output port 102. If, on the other hand the detector 115 detects that there is no short circuit at the input port 101 and that there is an energy supply connected to the input port 101, the control unit 105 is arranged to control the ACRF to function as an ACRF.
(12) Thus, for example, if there has been a short circuit or/and an energy supply has been absent at the input port 101, and the ACRF has thus been controlled to discharge energy from the energy supply, when there is no longer a short circuit at the input port 101 and there is an energy supply connected to the input port 101, the control unit 105 is arranged to control the ACRF to stop discharging energy from its energy supply 104, and to resume its ACRF function again.
(13) The discharge of energy from the energy supply 104 can also be seen as a so called Automatic Hold Up function, AHU. Thus, the control unit 105 can be seen as toggling the ACRF between an ACRF function and an AHU function, depending on what the first detector 115 detects. For this reason, the control unit 105 can also be seen as a so called digital switch-mode controller, a DSMC.
(14)
(15) Below, with reference to
(16) Initially, when the electronic circuit 100 is started, the capacitor 104 is charged with energy, as shown in
(17) As shown in
(18) When the level Vbst_idle is reached, the Control Unit 105 will strive to maintain the level Vbst_idle over the capacitor 104, which is shown in
(19) The Control Unit 105 is arranged to optimize the Vbst_avg level so that as much energy as possible is stored at any time in the case that the ACRF needs to start functioning as an AHU. This is done by increasing the level Vbst_avg as much as possible without going above a maximum level which here and in
(20) Thus, the voltage Cy is ramped up from 0 V to the level Vbst_idle, following which the ACRF is idle, i.e. no energy needs to be discharged from the capacitor 104 in order for the ACRF to carry out its filter function. During the idle period, a slow discharge of the energy stored in the capacitor 104 will naturally take place, as shown in
(21) In the example shown in
(22) As mentioned before, the first detector 115 is arranged to detect a short circuit at the input port 101 or the absence of an energy supply unit at the input port 101, and if this s the case (i.e. either of these two conditions) the Control Unit 105 then toggles the ACRF to act as an AHU instead.
(23) In this case, i.e. AHU function, the Control Unit 105 will attempt to control the ACRF to maintain the output voltage V.sub.OUT at the output port 102 of the ACRF 110, which will be done by discharging energy from the capacitor 104.
(24) If the conditions for controlling the ACRF to act as an AHU disappear before the average level Vbst_avg of the voltage over the capacitor 104 falls below a certain minimum level Uinmin, the Control Unit 105 will either ramp up the voltage over the capacitor 104 as was shown in
(25) The filter function of the ACRF will now be described in more detail, with reference to
(26) As has been explained previously, I.sub.OUT=I.sub.i+I.sub.. By means of this equation, I.sub. can be used to regulate I.sub.i when/if I.sub.OUT varies, so that I.sub.i is kept stable.
(27) In order to illustrate the function of the ACRF 110 as an ACRF, i.e. not as an AHU,
(28) Since, as noted previously, I.sub.OUT=I.sub.i+I.sub., variations in I.sub.out which would cause corresponding variations in I.sub.i can be compensated for by varying I.sub. inversely to the variations in I.sub.i, so that I.sub.out is kept stable and within the limits I.sub.out2I.sub.out1.
(29)
(30) In addition, an embodiment of the ACRF 110 is shown in
(31) The ACRF 110 also comprises an inductor 107, which at one end is connected between the drain of transistor 102 and the source of transistor 102. As shown in
(32)
(33) The control unit 105 is also shown in
(34) Three cases can be discerned for the ACRF: 1) The control unit 105 controls the ACRF to inject current (see
(35) In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed exemplary embodiments of the invention. However, many variations and modifications can be made to these embodiments without substantially departing from the principles of the present invention. Accordingly, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
(36) The invention is not limited to the examples of embodiments described above and shown in the drawings, but may be freely varied within the scope of the appended claims.