1. New AC–DC Power Factor Correction Architecture Suitable for High-Frequency Operation
- Author
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David J. Perreault, Seungbum Lim, David M. Otten, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of Electronics, Perreault, David J., Lim, Seungbum, and Otten, David M.
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Engineering ,Switched-mode power supply ,business.industry ,Buck converter ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Electrical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Power factor ,AC power ,01 natural sciences ,AC/AC converter ,Power optimizer ,Power module ,0103 physical sciences ,Boost converter ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electronic engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business - Abstract
This paper presents a novel ac-dc power factor correction (PFC) power conversion architecture for single-phase grid interface. The proposed architecture has significant advantages for achieving high efficiency, good power factor, and converter miniaturization, especially in low-to-medium power applications. The architecture enables twice-line-frequency energy to be buffered at high voltage with a large voltage swing, enabling reduction in the energy buffer capacitor size, and elimination of electrolytic capacitors. While this architecture can be beneficial with a variety of converter topologies, it is especially suited for system miniaturization by enabling designs that operate at high frequency (HF, 3 – 30 MHz). Moreover, we introduce circuit implementations that provide efficient operation in this range. The proposed approach is demonstrated for an LED driver converter operating at a (variable) HF switching frequency (3 – 10 MHz) from 120Vac, and supplying a 35Vdc output at up to 30W. The prototype converter achieves high efficiency (92%) and power factor (0.89), and maintains good performance over a wide load range. Owing to architecture and HF operation, the prototype achieves a high ‘box’ power density of 50W/ in3 (‘displacement’ power density of 130W/ in3), with miniaturized inductors, ceramic energy buffer capacitors, and a small-volume EMI filter., United States. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy. Agile Delivery of Electrical Power Technology, Texas Instruments Incorporated
- Published
- 2016
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