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Analysis and design of LLC resonant converter with variable magnetising inductance control
Author(s) -
Wei Yuqi,
Luo Quanming,
Chen Jian,
Alan Mantooth Homer
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
iet power electronics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.637
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1755-4543
pISSN - 1755-4535
DOI - 10.1049/iet-pel.2020.0007
Subject(s) - inductance , duty cycle , converters , pulse width modulation , resonant converter , engineering , pulse frequency modulation , control theory (sociology) , voltage , rectifier (neural networks) , operating point , automatic frequency control , electronic engineering , electrical engineering , computer science , control (management) , pulse (music) , pulse amplitude modulation , recurrent neural network , stochastic neural network , artificial intelligence , machine learning , artificial neural network
A conventional pulse frequency modulation (PFM) controlled LLC resonant converter requires a wide switching frequency operating range to regulate the output voltage. There are some disadvantages of PFM LLC resonant converters: (i) the design and optimisation of magnetic components and gate driver circuitry are challenging; (ii) due to the variable switching frequency operating range, electro‐magnetic interference performance of the converter is degraded; (iii) efficiency degradation; (iv) inability to achieve independent control in multiple‐output applications. To address the above‐mentioned problems and achieve fixed switching frequency operation, a variable magnetising inductance control (VMIC) strategy is proposed. In the proposed VMIC control strategy, the operating switching frequency of the primary switch is fixed and the duty cycle remains constant at 0.5. At the resonant frequency operating point, the output voltage is independent of both the magnetising inductance and load. In addition, the zero current turn‐off operation of the secondary rectifier requires that the switching frequency be designed below the resonant frequency. The operational principles and design considerations of the LLC resonant converter with VMIC are presented. Experimental results from a 200 W prototype are presented to validate the theoretical analysis and the effectiveness of the proposed VMIC control strategy.

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