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We present a compact battery charger topology for weight and cost sensitive applications with an average output current of 9A targeted for 36V batteries commonly found in electric bicycles. Instead of using a conventional boost converter with large DC-link capacitors, we accomplish PFC-functionality by shaping the charging current into a sin²-shape. In addition, a novel control scheme without input-current sensing is introduced. A-priori knowledge is used to implement a feed-forward control in combination with a closed-loop output current control to maintain the target current. The use of a full-bridge/half bridge LLC converter enables operation in a wide input-voltage range.
A fully featured prototype has been built with a peak output power of 1050W. An average output power of 400W was measured, resulting in a power density of 1.8 kW/dm³. At 9A charging current, a power factor of 0.96 was measured and the efficiency exceeds 93% on average with passive rectification.
The impact of pulse charging has been evaluated on a 400Wh battery which was charged with the proposed converter as well as CC-CV-charging for reference. Both charging schemes show similar battery surface temperatures.
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.
DMOS transistors often suffer from substantial self-heating during high power dissipation, which can lead to thermal destruction if the device temperature reaches excessive values. A successfully demonstrated method to reduce the peak temperature is the redistribution of power dissipation density from the hotter to the cooler device areas by careful layout modification. However, this is very tedious and time-consuming if complex-shaped devices as often found in industrial applications are considered.
This paper presents an approach for fully automatic layout optimization which requires only a few hours processing time. The approach is applied to complex shaped test structures which are investigated by measurements and electro-thermal simulations. Results show a significantly lower peak temperature and an energy capability gain of 84 %, offering potential for a 18 % size reduction of active area.
DMOS transistors are often subject to high power dissipation and thus substantial self-heating. This limits their safe operating area because very high device temperatures can lead to thermal runaway and subsequent destruction. Because the peak temperature usually occurs only in a small region in the device, it is possible to redistribute part of the dissipated power from the hot region to the cooler device areas. In this way, the peak temperature is reduced, whereas the total power dissipation is still the same. Assuming that a certain temperature must not be exceeded for safe operation, the improved device is now capable of withstanding higher amounts of energy with an unchanged device area. This paper presents two simple methods to redistribute the power dissipation density and thus lower the peak device temperature. The presented methods only require layout changes. They can easily be applied to modern power technologies without the need of process modifications. Both methods are implemented in test structures and investigated by simulations and measurements.