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Size and cost of a switched mode power supply can be reduced by increasing the switching frequency. The maximum switching frequency and the maximum input voltage range, respectively, is limited by the minimum propagated on-time pulse, which is mainly determined by the level shifter speed. At switching frequencies above 10 MHz, a voltage conversion with an input voltage range up to 50 V and output voltages below 5 V requires an on-time of a pulse width modulated signal of less than 5 ns. This cannot be achieved with conventional level shifters. This paper presents a level shifter circuit, which controls an NMOS power FET on a high-voltage domain up to 50 V. The level shifter was implemented as part of a DCDC converter in a 180 nm BiCMOS technology. Experimental results confirm a propagation delay of 5 ns and on-time pulses of less than 3 ns. An overlapping clamping structure with low parasitic capacitances in combination with a high-speed comparator makes the level shifter also very robust against large coupling currents during high-side transitions as fast as 20 V/ns, verified by measurements. Due to the high dv/dt, capacitive coupling currents can be two orders of magnitude larger than the actual signal current. Depending on the conversion ratio, the presented level shifter enables an increase of the switching frequency for multi-MHz converters towards 100 MHz. It supports high input voltages up to 50 V and it can be applied also to other high-speed applications.
This paper presents an integrated synchronous buck converter for input voltages >12V with 10MHz switching frequency. The converter comprises a predictive dead time control with frequency compensated sampling of the switching node which does not require body diode forward conduction. A high dead time resolution of 125 ps is achieved by a differential delay chain with 8-bit resolution. This way, the efficiency of fast switching DCDC converters can be optimized by eliminating the body diode forward conduction losses, minimizing reverse recovery losses and by achieving zero voltage switching at turn off. The converter was implemented in a 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. The power losses were measured to be reduced by 30%by the proposed dead time control, which results in a 6% efficiency increase at VOUT = 5V and 0.2A load. The peak efficiency is 81 %.
A 20 V, 8 MHz resonant DCDC converter with predictive control for 1 ns resolution soft-switching
(2015)
Fast switching power supplies allow to reduce the size and cost of external passive components. However, the capacitive switching losses of the power stage will increase and become the dominant part of the total losses. Therefore, resonant topologies are the known key to reduce the losses of the power stage. A power switch with an additional resonant circuit can be turned on under soft-switching conditions, ideally with zero-voltage-switching (ZVS). As conventional resonant converts are only efficient for a constant load, this paper presents a predictive regulation loop to approach soft-switching conditions under varying load and component tolerances. A sample and hold based detection circuit is utilized to control the turn-on of the power switch by a digital regulation. The proposed design was fabricated in a 180 nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. The efficiency of the converter was measured to be increased by up to 16 % vs. worst case timing and by 13 % compared to a conventional hard-switching buck converter at 20 V input voltage and at approximately 8 MHz switching frequency.
The presented wide-Vin step-down converter introduces a parallel-resonant converter (PRC), comprising an integrated 5-bit capacitor array and a 300 nH resonant coil, placed in parallel to a conventional buck converter. Unlike conventional resonant concepts, the implemented soft-switching control eliminates input voltage dependent losses over a wide operating range. This ensures high efficiency across a wide range of Vin= 12-48V, 100-500mA load and 5V output at up to 15MHz switching frequency. The peak efficiency of the converter is 76.3 %. Thanks to the low output current ripple, the output capacitor can be as small as 50 nF, while the inductor tolerates a larger ESR, resulting in small component size. The proposed PRC architecture is also suitable for future power electronics applications using fast-switching GaN devices.
Erfindungsgemäß wird ein Verfahren zur Optimierung des Betriebs eines in einem Regelkreis für einen Aufwärtswandler vorgesehenen digitalen Reglers (30) zur Verfügung gestellt. Das Verfahren umfasst die folgenden Verfahrensschritte: Auswerten (S1) mindestens einer Ausgangsgröße des digitalen Reglers im Betrieb des Aufwärtswandlers. Schätzen (S2) des instantanen Lastwiderstandswertes (RL) in der Strecke des Regelkreises anhand der mindestens einen ausgewerteten Ausgangsgröße. Einstellen (S3) mindestens eines Reglerkoeffizienten des digitalen Reglers anhand des geschätzten instantanen Lastwiderstandswertes (RL) im Betrieb des Aufwärtswandlers. Erfindungsgemäß bedingt eine Veränderung in der Einstellung des mindestens einen Reglerkoeffizienten eine Veränderung der Transitfrequenz im Regelkreis. Ferner wird ein Regelkreis für einen Aufwärtswandler mit einem digitalen Regler zur Verfügung gestellt, welcher eingerichtet ist, um die Schritte des erfindungsgemäßen Verfahrens durchzuführen. Des Weiteren wird ein Computerprogrammprodukt mit computerausführbarem Programmcode zur Durchführung des erfindungsgemäßen Verfahrens zur Verfügung gestellt.
This paper presents a wide-Vin step-down parallel-resonant converter (PRC), comprising an integrated 5-bit capacitor array and a 300-nH resonant coil, placed in parallel to a conventional buck converter. Soft-switching resonant converters are beneficial for high-Vin multi-MHz converters to reduce dominant switching losses, enabling higher switching frequencies. The output filter inductor is optimized based on an empirical study of available inductors. The study shows that faster switching significantly reduces not only the inductor value but also volume, price, and even the inductor losses. In addition, unlike conventional resonant concepts, soft-switching control as part of the proposed PRC eliminates input voltage-dependent losses over a wide operating range, resulting in 76.3% peak efficiency. At Vin = 48 V, a loss reduction of 35% is achieved compared with the conventional buck converter. Adjusting an integrated capacitor array, and selecting the number of oscillation periods, keeps the switching frequency within a narrow range. This ensures high efficiency across a wide range of Vin = 12–48 V, 100–500-mA load, and 5-V output at up to 25-MHz switching frequency. Thanks to the low output current ripple, the output capacitor can be as small
as 50 nF.
Boost converters suffer from a bandwidth limitation caused by the right-half plane zero (RHPZ), which occurs in the control-to-output transfer function. In contrast, there are many applications that require superior dynamic behavior. Further, size and cost of boost converter systems can be minimized by reduced voltage deviations and fast transient responses in case of large signal load transients. The key idea of the proposed ΔV/Δt-intervention control concept is to adapt the controller output to its new steady state value immediately after a load transient by prediction from known parameters. The concept is implemented in a digital control circuit, consisting of an ASIC in a 110 nm-technology and a Xilinx Spartan-6 field programmable gate array (FPGA). In a boost converter with 3.5V input voltage, 6.3V output voltage, 1.2A load, and 500 kHz switching frequency, the output voltage deviations are 2.8x smaller, scaling down the output capacitor value by the same factor. The recovery times are 2.4x shorter in case of large signal load transients with the proposed concept. The control is widely applicable, as it supports constant switching frequencies and allows for duty cycle and inductor current limitations. It also shows various advantages compared to conventional control and to selected adaptive control concepts.
This paper presents a digitally controlled boost converter IC for high output voltage and fast transient applications. Thus, it is well applicable in automotive and industrial environments. The 3V-to-6V input voltage, 6.3V output voltage, 1A boost converter IC is fabricated in a 180nm BCD technology. Digital control enables cost savings, advanced control concepts, and it is less parameter sensitive compared to common analog control. A 90 ns latency, 6-bit delay line ADC operates with a window concept, meeting high resolution requirements, e.g. in car battery applications. An output voltage live tracking is included for extending the ADC conversion window. A charge pump DAC provides high resolution, monotonicity, and short 128 ns conversion time. Further, a standard digital PI controller is enhanced by a simple but effective ΔV/Δt-intervention control. It results in 2.8x reduced output voltage deviations in case of load steps, scaling down the output capacitor value by the same factor.
Pegelumsetzer mit einem ersten Eingang, der ein erstes Signal erfasst, wobei das erste Signal einen ersten Spannungspegel aufweist, einem Ausgang, der ein zweites Signal erzeugt, wobei das zweite Signal einen zweiten Spannungspegel aufweist, wobei der zweite Spannungspegel größer als der erste Spannungspegel ist und einem Differenzverstärker, der eine Differenzspannung erfasst, wobei der Differenzverstärker mit einer Versorgungsspannung und einer hochseitige Masse verbunden ist, wobei die Versorgungsspannung ein erstes Spannungspotential und die hochseitige Masse ein zweites Spannungspotential aufweist, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass der erste Eingang mit einer ersten Teilschaltung verbunden ist, wobei die erste Teilschaltung mit einer zweiten Teilschaltung unidirektional verbunden ist, wobei die zweite Teilschaltung mit der Versorgungsspannung und der hochseitigen Masse verbunden ist, wobei die zweite Teilschaltung mindestens zwei Ausgänge aufweist, die die Differenzspannung des Differenzverstärkers erzeugen, wobei über einen Versorgungsspannungseingang und einen hochseitigen Masseeingang eine zusätzliche Spannung einkoppelt und der Differenzverstärker das zweite Signal in Abhängigkeit der Differenzspannung, der Versorgungsspannung, der hochseitigen Masse und der zusätzlichen Spannung erzeugt.