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Many GaN power transistors contain a PN junction between gate and the channel region close to the source. In order to maintain the on-state, current must continuously be supplied to the junction. Therefore, the commonly recommended approach uses a gate bias voltage of 12V to compensate the Miller current through a boost circuit. For the same purpose, a novel gate driving method based on an inductive feed forward has been presented. With this, stable turn-on can be achieved even for a bias voltage of only 5V. The effectiveness of this concept is demonstrated by double pulse measurements, switching currents up to 27A and a voltage of 400V. For both approaches a compact design with low source inductance is characterized. In addition to the significant reduction of the gate bias voltage and peak gate current, the new approach reduces the switching losses for load currents >23 A.
We present a dual active bridge topology suitable for wide voltage range applications covering all combinations of 200V to 600V on the input and 20V to 60V on the output with constant power of 1kW.We employ a stepped inductance scheme to adjust the effective inductance of the converter, thus extending the efficient operation range. Using a variable switching frequency between 35 kHz and 150 kHz with operation-point-dependent limits further increases the performance of the converter. A prototype was built and the proposed changes have been compared to a fixed frequency, fixed inductance implementation. Measurements show a maximum loss reduction of 40 %, leading to a peak efficiency of 97% while maintaining constant output power over the entire working area.
A novel gate driving approach to balance the transient current of parallel-connected GaN-HEMTs
(2018)
To enable higher current handling capability of GaN-based DC/DC converters, devices have to be used in parallel. However, their switching times differ, especially if their threshold voltages are not identical, which causes unbalanced device current. This paper focuses on the homogeneous distribution of turn-on switching losses of GaN-HEMTs connected in parallel. By applying a new gate driver concept, the transient current is distributed evenly. The effectiveness of this concept is demonstrated by double pulse measurements, for switching currents up to 45A and a voltage of 400V. A uniform current distribution is achieved, including a reduction of the turn-on losses by 50% compared to a conventional setup.
A novel brushless excitation concept for synchronous machines with a rotating power converter is proposed in this paper. The concept does not need an auxiliary winding or any other modification to the machine structure apart from an inverter with a DC link capacitor and a controller on the rotor. The power required for the rotor excitation is provided by injecting harmonics into the stator winding. Thus, a voltage in the field coil is induced. The rotor inverter is controlled such that the alternating current charges the DC link capacitor. At the same time the inverter supplies the DC field current to the field coil. The excitation concept is first developed in theory, then presented using an analytical model and FEA, and lastly investigated with a prelimininary experimental setup.
In this work design rules for a novel brushless excitation system for externally excited synchronous machines are discussed. The concept replaces slip rings with a fullbridge active rectifier and a controller mounted on the rotor. An AC signal induced from the stator is used to charge the rotor DC link. The DC current for the rotor excitation is provided from this DC link source. Finite element analysis of an existing machine is used to analyze the practicability of the excitation system.
The Dual Active Bridge (DAB) is a very promising topology for future power converters. However, careless operation can lead to a DC component in the transformer current. The problem is further exacerbated when the phase shift changes during operation. This work presents a study of DC bias effects on the DAB with special regard to transient effects introduced by sudden shifts in the output load. We present a simple yet effective approach to avoid DC bias entirely.
Improved inductive feed-forward for fast turn-on of power semiconductors during hard switching
(2019)
A transformer is used to increase the gate voltage during turn-on, thus reducing the necessary bias voltage of the gate driver. Counteracting the voltage dependency of the gate capacitance of high-voltage power devices, faster transitions are possible. The additional transformer only slighly increases the over-voltage during turn-off.
Novel design for a coreless printed circuit board transformer realizing high bandwidth and coupling
(2019)
Rogowski coils offer galvanic isolation and can measure alternating currents with a high bandwidth. Coreless printed circuit board (PCB) transformers have been used as an alternative to limit the additional stray inductance if a Rogowski coil can not be attached to the circuit. A new PCB transformer layout is proposed to reduce cost, decrease additional stray inductance, increase the bandwidth of current measurements and simplify the integration into existing designs.
In this work, a comparison between different brushless harmonic-excited wound-rotor synchronous machines is performed. The general idea of all topologies is the elimination of the slip rings and auxiliary windings by using the already existing stator and rotor winding for field excitation. This is achieved by injecting a harmonic airgap field with the help of power electronics. This harmonic field does not interact with the fundamental field, it just transfers the excitation power across the airgap. Alternative methods with varying number of phases, different pole-pair combinations, and winding layouts are covered and compared with a detailed Finite-Element-parameterized model. Parasitic effects due to saturation and coupling between the harmonic and main windings are considered.
In this work, a brushless, harmonic-excited wound-rotor synchronous machine without any auxiliary windings which can provide full torque at startup is investigated experimentally. The excitation power is transferred inductively by superimposing an additional harmonic field of different pole-pair number on top of the airgap field. This is achieved by feeding the parallel paths of the stator and rotor winding separately. A prototype for the harmonic-excited synchronous machine has been constructed and experimental results are presented to verify the concept. The main loss contributors are identified and the importance of considering core losses under harmonic excitation is discussed. A general analytical model for harmonic excited synchronous machines is proposed which enables a quick estimation of the iron core flux densities and the core losses generated by the additional harmonic currents.