CURRENT CONDUCTOR STRUCTURE WITH FREQUENCY-DEPENDENT RESISTANCE
20180047496 ยท 2018-02-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M1/44
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A current conductor structure with a frequency-dependent resistance. The current conductor structure comprises a first current conductor and a second current conductor connected in parallel. The first and second current conductor are configured such that the second current conductor has a higher resistance and a lower inductance than the first conductor so that, above a set frequency limit, the resistance component of a total impedance of the current conductor structure is larger than the resistance component of the impedance of the first conductor current.
Claims
1. A current conductor structure comprising: a first current path; and a second current path, wherein the first current path and the second current path are connected in parallel, and wherein the second current path has a higher resistance and a lower inductance than the first current path such that, above a set frequency limit, a resistance component of a total impedance of the current conductor structure is larger than a resistance component of an impedance of the first current path.
2. The current conductor structure of claim 1, comprising: one or more layers of insulating material forming a supporting laminate structure; and a first electrically conducting strip acting as the first current path, wherein the first electrically conducting strip is arranged to form a first inductive loop that extends in a first direction parallel to a plane of the laminate structure and in a second direction perpendicular to the plane of the laminate structure.
3. The current conductor structure of claim 2, comprising: a second electrically conducting strip acting as the second current path, wherein the second electrically conducting strip is arranged to form a second inductive loop that extends in the first direction and in the second direction, wherein dimensions of the first inductive loop and the second inductive loop in the first direction and in the second direction define loop areas of the first inductive loop and the second inductive loop, and wherein the loop area of the first inductive loop is larger than the loop area of the second inductive loop.
4. The current conductor structure of claim 3, wherein the second electrically conducting strip folds around one or more layers of the supporting laminate structure to form the second inductive loop, and the first electrically conducting strip folds around at least one more layer of the supporting laminate structure than the first electrically conducting strip to form the first inductive loop.
5. The current conductor structure of claim 3, wherein the second inductive loop is arranged inside the first inductive loop.
6. The current conductor structure of claim 3, wherein the second electrically conducting strip is made from a different material than the first electrically conducting strip.
7. The current conductor structure of claim 6, wherein the first current path is made of copper foil and the second current path is made of aluminum foil.
8. The current conductor structure of claim 3, wherein the second electrically conducting strip has a different width and/or thickness than the first electrically conducting strip.
9. The current conductor structure of claim 3, wherein the first electrically conducting strip and the second electrically conducting strip are in the form of self-adhesive tapes each folded around one or more layers of the supporting laminate structure.
10. The current conductor structure of claim 1, wherein the first and/or the second current path comprises a passive electric component.
11. The current conductor structure of claim 1, comprising: one or more layers of insulating material forming a supporting laminate structure; a first portion and a second portion of a first electrically conducting strip, and a first passive electric component electrically coupling the first portion and the second portion of the first electrically conducting strip together, wherein the first portion of the first electrically conducting strip, the second portion of the first electrically conducting strip, and the first passive electric component are arranged to act as the first current path and form a first inductive loop that extends in a first direction and in a second direction.
12. The current conductor structure of claim 11, comprising: a first portion and a second portion of a second electrically conduct strip; and a second passive electric component electrically coupling the first portion and the second portion of the second electrically conducting strip together, wherein the first portion of the second electrically conducting strip, the second portion of the second electrically conducting strip, and the passive electric component are arranged to act as the second current path and form a second inductive loop that extends in a first direction in a plane of the laminate structure and in a second direction perpendicular to the plane of the laminate structure.
13. A method for manufacturing a current conductor structure with a frequency-dependent resistance, the method comprising: folding an electrically conducting strip around a first layer of insulating material to form an inductive loop, attaching at least one second layer of insulating material to the first layer to form a laminate structure, folding another electrically conducting strip around the laminate structure, and connecting the two electrically conducting strips in parallel, wherein one of the two electrically conducting strips has a higher resistance and a lower inductance than the other electrically conducting strip such that, above a set frequency limit, a resistance component of a total impedance of the current conductor structure is larger than a resistance component of an impedance of said other electrically conducting strip.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] In the following the invention will be described in greater detail by means of preferred embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] The present disclosure describes a current conductor structure with a frequency-dependent resistance. The current conductor structure may be in the form of a bus bar in a main circuit of a power electronics converter, for example. The power electronic converter, may be a frequency converter, for example.
[0018] The current conductor structure may comprise at least a first current path and a second current path connected in parallel. The first and second current path may be configured such that the second current path has a higher resistance and a lower inductance than the first current path. As a result, the resistance component of a total impedance of the current conductor structure is larger than the resistance component of the impedance of the first current path at frequencies above a set frequency limit. A current through a resistance dissipates power into heat. Therefore, the current conductor structure selectively dampens currents at frequencies above the set frequency limit through dissipation. The current conductor structure may be used in various places in power electronics devices. For example, the current conductor structure may be integrated to a main current or commutation loops of a power converter with minimal effect in the losses at those frequencies transferring the power. The current conductor structure may also be used for selective parallel filtering. The adjustable high-frequency damping provided by the current conductor structure may be integrated to a main circuit of a converter without a significant effect to losses at lower frequencies.
[0019]
[0020] The impedances Z.sub.1 and Z.sub.2 each consist of two components: a resistance component R (i.e. resistance) and a reactive component X (i.e. reactance). These components have a 90 degree phase shift between each other. The reactance in the current conductor structure according to the present disclosure is inductive, so the reactance leads the resistance. Such impedance may be defined as a complex number as follows, for example:
Z=R+jX=R+jL,(1)
where L represents the amplitude of the reactive component. L represents the inductance of the current path and represents angular frequency.
[0021] The reactive component changes in response to frequency, whereas the resistance component ideally remains unchanged. At low frequencies where reactances of the current paths are low, a first impedance Z.sub.1 of the first current path is lower than a second impedance Z.sub.2 of the second current path because the second current path has a higher resistance. However, as the frequency increases, a reactance X.sub.1 of the first current path rises faster than a reactance X.sub.2 of the second current path because the first current path has a higher inductance. Thus, at a set limit frequency, the amplitude |Z.sub.1| of the first impedance Z.sub.1 reaches (and then surpasses) the amplitude |Z.sub.2| of the second impedance Z.sub.2.
[0022] Based on the impedances Z.sub.1 and Z.sub.2 of the first and second current path, the total impedance Z.sub.tot may be calculated as follows, for example:
[0023] The quality factor (i.e. the reactance-to-resistance ratio) of the total impedance Z.sub.tot calculated with Equation (2) is between the quality factors of the impedances of the first and second current path. The first and second current path may be configured such that, at low frequencies, the first impedance Z.sub.1 is much lower than the second impedance Z.sub.2. As a result, the divisor in Equation (2) is determined by the second impedance Z.sub.2, and the result of the division is closer to the first impedance. However, at higher frequencies above the set limit frequency, the first impedance Z.sub.1 is higher than the second impedance Z.sub.2, and the result of Equation (2) is closer to the second impedance Z.sub.2.
[0024]
[0025] At lower frequencies in
[0026] The frequency at which the second current path becomes dominant (i.e. the second current path has an impedance with a lower amplitude than the first current path) can be controlled through the selection of resistances and inductances of the first and second current path. It is thus possible to set a limit frequency at which dissipative power losses (caused by the resistance component of the total impedance) increase. The limit may represent a frequency above which undesirable emissions and oscillations are to be damped, for example.
[0027] A current conductor structure according to the present disclosure may be implemented such that the first and second current path are implemented as electrically conducting strips on a supporting laminate structure.
[0028] For example, a current conductor structure according to the present disclosure may comprise one or more layers of insulating material forming a supporting laminate structure, and a first electrically conducting strip acting as the first current path. The first electrically conducting strip may be arranged to form a first inductive loop that extends in a first direction parallel to the plane of the laminate structure and in a second direction perpendicular to the plane of the laminate structure. The current conductor structure may further comprise a second electrically conducting strip which acts as the second current path, wherein the second electrically conducting strip is arranged to form a second inductive loop that extends in the first and second direction. The dimensions of the first and second inductive loop in the first and second direction define loop areas of the first and second inductive loop. The dimensions may be selected such that the loop area of the first inductive loop is larger than the loop area of the second inductive loop.
[0029] With a laminate structure, the current conductor structure may be easily integrated to a DC busbar of a power converter in order to achieve extra high frequency resistance in commutation loop noise reduction, for example. An additional benefit of a current conductor structure according to the present disclosure is a lowered inductance on higher frequencies, which lowers peak voltage levels in the main circuit commutation loops of the power converter.
[0030]
[0031] The laminate structure 33 in
[0032] The first conducting strip 30 and the second conducting strip 32 both have their first ends 30a and 32a, respectively, on a first end of the laminate structure 33. The first conducting strip 30 and the second conducting strip 32 extend parallel to the length axis l (i.e. in the first direction) towards a second end of the laminate structure 33. At the second end, the first conducting strip 30 and the second conducting strip 32 form folds 30c and 32c, respectively. At the folds, the conducting strips extend in a direction of the thickness h of the laminate structure 33 (i.e. in the second direction perpendicular to the plane of the laminate structure). After folding, the first conducting strip 30 and the second conducting strip 32 extend back to the first end of the laminate structure 33, ending finally at second ends 30b and 32b, respectively. The portions of the conducting strips 30 and 32 before folding may extend on different planes (that are parallel to the plane of the laminate structure) than the portions after folding. In this manner, the first conducting strip 30 and the second conducting strip 32 form a first and second inductive loop, respectively.
[0033] Although not shown in
[0034] In a current conductor structure according to the present disclosure, the second current path (e.g. the second conducting strip 32 in
[0035] The loop area of the first inductive loop is larger than the loop area of the second inductive loop in
[0036] According to the present disclosure, the second current path (e.g. the second conducting strip 32 in
[0037] If thin conductor foils are used in the current conductor structure, the skin effect associated with eddy currents may be kept at minimum.
[0038] The impedance characteristics of a current conductor structure according to the present disclosure may be adjusted with passive electric components. The first and/or the second current path may comprise a passive component. For example, a passive component may be connected in parallel with the first current conducting strip and/or in parallel with the second current conducting strip. In
[0039] Also, instead of using continuous conducting strips for forming the first and second current paths according to the present disclosure, the conducting strips may each comprise separate portions connected by an electric component. For example, similar to the embodiments of
[0040] The passive electric components may be resistors or capacitors for example. By selecting suitable component values, the impedances of the first and second current path may be adjusted. In addition to using passive component dedicated solely for the current conductor structure, passive components having other functions may also utilized. For example, a capacitor of a DC link in a power electronic converter may also be used for adjusting the impedance of the current conductor structure. In the context of the present disclosure, the term passive component or passive electric component may be one discrete passive electric component or a plurality of discrete passive components connected in series and/or in parallel.
[0041] There are many ways to manufacturing a laminate structure for the current conductor structure according to the present disclosure. Printed circuit board manufacturing process may be used, for example. In one embodiment, the first and second electrically conducting strips may be in the form of self-adhesive tapes each folded around one or more layers of the supporting laminate structure. Manufacturing a current conductor structure with a frequency-dependent resistance may comprise folding an electrically conducting strip around a first layer of insulating material to form an inductive loop. As a result, the strip extends on one surface of the first layer, then folds at an end of the layer, and extends back on the other surface of the first layer. At least one second layer of insulating material may be attached to the first layer to form a laminate structure, and another electrically conducting strip may be folded around the laminate structure. The two electrically conducting strips may then be connected in parallel. The two electrically conducting strips may configured by using above-described principles. One of the two electrically conducting strips may have a higher resistance and a lower inductance than the other electrically conducting strip so that, at frequencies above a set frequency limit, the resistance component of a total impedance of the current conductor structure is larger than the resistance component of the impedance of said other electrically conducting strip.
[0042] It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advances, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are not limited to the examples described above but may vary within the scope of the claims.