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Lossless Snubber with Minimum Voltage Stress for Continuous Current Mode Tapped-Inductor Boost Converters for High Step-up Applications

  • Kang, Jeong-Il (Research & Development Office, Visual Display, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.) ;
  • Han, Sang-Kyoo (School of Electrical Engineering, College of EECS, Kookmin University) ;
  • Han, Jonghee (Research & Development Office, Visual Display, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.)
  • Received : 2013.12.10
  • Accepted : 2014.04.02
  • Published : 2014.07.20

Abstract

To invigorate the tapped-inductor boost (TIB) topology in emerging high step-up applications for off-grid products, a lossless snubber consisting of two capacitors and three diodes is proposed. Since the switch voltage stress is minimized in the proposed circuit, it is allowed to use a device with a lower cost, higher efficiency, and higher availability. Moreover, since the leakage inductance is fully utilized, no effort to minimize it is required. This allows for a highly productive and cost-effective design of the tapped-inductor. The proposed circuit also shows a high step-up ratio and provides relaxation of the switching loss and diode reverse-recovery. In this paper, the operation is analyzed in detail, the steady-state equation is derived, and the design considerations are discussed. Some experimental results are provided to confirm the validity of the proposed circuit.

Keywords

I. INTRODUCTION

In Sub-Saharan African and South Asian underdeveloped countries, one can easily find the off-grid areas where people do not have an access to the power grid. In those areas, the demand for stand-alone off-grid power systems based on renewable energy such as sunlight and wind is rapidly increasing. This reflects the recent increase in their need for electricity. Market analysts have found that there are already more than 2 million off-grid power systems. The output voltage of these kinds of power systems is generally very low when compared to that coming from the ac mains of the power grid. They are mostly loaded by 12V automotive batteries for a continuous supply of electricity under varying weather conditions [1]-[4].

Market analysts have also found that the main use of this off-grid power is for watching television and lighting as shown in Fig. 1. The lighting devices should be made of highly efficient LEDs since this electric power is seriously limited by the weather conditions and battery capacity. For the same reason, the televisions should be LCD televisions with an LED backlight unit since they use less power than any other type of television. These devices usually consist of 30 or more LEDs. For example, a 30W-rated medium power LED tube and a backlight unit smaller than 32-inchs contain around 30 LEDs since 1W-LEDs are currently in wide use. It needs to be noted that all of the LEDs are preferred to be connected in series and driven by a single circuit so that all of the LEDs carry the same current for good brightness uniformity. A challenge for the circuit engineer is that this configuration requires a 10-times or higher step-up LED driver, which is practically unattainable with conventional boost topologies due to the duty ratio being very close to the unity [5].

One simple and effective alternative to overcome the step-up ratio limitation in boost topologies is the tapped-inductor boost (TIB) topology. By simply replacing the inductor with a tapped-inductor, the TIB topology gives a much higher step-up ratio at a reduced duty ratio [5]. Another important advantage of the TIB topology is that the voltage stress on the switch in its turn-off state is equal to the mean of the input and output voltages weighted by the winding turn numbers, whereas a voltage equal to the output voltage appears on the switch in the conventional boost topology. However, this feature is limited to cases where the effects due to parasitic reactance are negligible. In practice, the switch of the TIB topology suffers from a severe voltage spike due to the leakage inductance of the tapped-inductor. Without suppressing this voltage spike, the TIB topology is much the worse from the standpoint of the switching stress. There have been many elaborated studies on limiting the switch voltage spike of the TIB topology and improving the converter performance [6]-[18]. However, they generally modify the original TIB topology, limit the switch voltage to a non-minimum value, or require an auxiliary inductor or winding to achieve proper circuit operation.

Fig. 1.Typical off-grid power appliances.

In this paper, a lossless snubber with minimum voltage stress for a continuous current mode TIB converter is proposed [19]. It consists of two capacitors and three diodes. This provides more boost capability and a higher efficiency to the original TIB converter. The following features make the proposed circuit very attractive especially in commercial applications. First, a large improvement in the circuit reliability is achieved. Since the proposed circuit limits the switch voltage of the TIB converter to its minimum, it is possible to use switches with significantly lower voltage ratings which generally results in a lower cost, higher performance, and higher availability. Second, by utilizing the leakage inductance of the tapped-inductor, problems related to di/dt such as the switching loss and the diode reverse-recovery are alleviated. Moreover, efforts in designing magnetically coupled devices to minimize the flux leakage, such as special winding methods which in most cases sacrifice cost and productivity, are not necessary. Third, the proposed circuit can be readily incorporated into an existing system since it does not modify the original TIB topology.

The operation principle of the proposed circuit is analyzed in detail in this paper, and the steady-state step-up relationship is derived based on this analysis. The design considerations are also discussed with various boundary conditions related to the proper operation. Some experimental results from a 12V to 120V/240mA LED driver prototype for a lighting module are also provided to confirm the validity of the proposed circuit.

 

II. CIRCUIT ANALYSIS

A. Operation analysis

The proposed circuit consists of a clamp capacitor Cc, a clamp diode Dc, a resonant capacitor Cr, and two path diodes Da and Db for charging and discharging Cr, as shown in Fig. 2. The tapped-inductor is modeled as an ideal transformer with a turns ratio of N=N2/N1, a magnetizing inductance Lm, and a leakage inductance Lk. The switch M is modeled as an ideal switch in parallel with the output capacitance Cds. The parasitic elements other than Lm, Lk and Cds are basically ignored. However, they are separately considered when they produce a meaningful effect. The switching frequency is assumed to be f=1/T, and 1+N is denoted as k for convenience in deriving the equations.

Fig. 2.TIB converter with proposed lossless snubber circuit.

Fig. 3.Qualitative illustration of theoretical key waveforms.

Fig. 3 shows the key waveforms of the proposed converter (referring to the TIB converter with the proposed snubber). The magnetizing current im is shown to keep varying throughout the switching cycle. However, the operation is analyzed with the assumption that it is constant during the switching transients and snubber operation. In other words, im=IM1 for t0~t2 and im=IM2 for t3~t6, where IM1 and IM2 denote the minimum and maximum values of im, respectively. Otherwise, the quantitative analysis becomes very complicated. The input voltage Vi, output voltage Vo, output current Io, and clamp voltage Vc are assumed to be ripple-free and constant. It is also assumed that Cr is much larger than Cds. The clamp voltage Vc which determines the switch voltage stress can be obtained from the input and output voltages weighted by the tapped-inductor turns ratios as:

There are 7 topological states in one switching cycle of the proposed converter.

Pre-On-mode 1[~t0, t6~T]: The switch M is in the off-state, and the resonant capacitor Cr is in its completely discharged state. The secondary current of im/k, which is equal to the primary current, is carried by output diode D1, and the magnetizing current im decreases with a slope of (Vi-Vc)/Lm. This mode is identical to the switch-off mode of the original TIB converter.

On-mode 1[t0~t1]: This mode begins with the turn-on of the switch M and represents a turn-on delay due to the current slopes which are limited by the leakage inductance Lk. The equivalent circuit is shown in Fig. 4(a).

Fig. 4.Topological stages in On-modes.

Since the switch current ids is slanted with a slope limited by Lk, the zero current soft turn-on of M is achieved, alleviating the switch turn-on loss. This mode ends when the secondary current is reaches zero, providing zero current soft turn-off of output diode D1.

The reverse-recovery current, which is not obvious in Fig. 3, is illustrated in detail in Fig. 5. Since the slope of is is also limited by Lk, the peak reverse-recovery current of D1, denoted by –Irr1, is small, providing relaxation of the associated noise and EMI problems. This reverse-recovery current slightly further discharges Lk and leaves a small negative current –Irr1 in the secondary winding at the end of this mode.

On-mode 2[t1~t2]: The small negative current of –Irr1 in the secondary winding, which is generated by the reverse-recovery of D1 at the end of On-mode 1, changes its path from D1 to Da at t=t1, and a path for the resonance of Cr and Lk to charge Cr is formed, as shown in Fig. 4(b). Neglecting the small jump of Irr1 in the waveform of iDa at t=t1, shown in Fig. 5, the resonance of Cr and Lk provides the zero current soft turn-on of Da by slowing down the current rise.

After a half cycle of resonance, the voltage across Cr reaches its peak value obtained from (8) as:

and the secondary current reaches zero providing the zero current soft turn-off of Da at t=t2. This is the end of On-mode 2.

The amount of charge released from Cc to charge Cr during this mode can be obtained from (6) as:

As illustrated in Fig. 5, the reverse-recovery of Da slightly further discharges Lk and leaves a small positive current Irr2 in the secondary winding. This current turns on Db, resulting in the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 4(c). The slope of is at this moment can be obtained from (6) as:

If the sign of (11) is negative, the current is cannot increase any further beyond Irr2 but immediately starts decreasing toward zero at t > t2, as shown in Fig. 5. After this current comes back to zero, the path diode Db processes its reverse-recovery and then turns back off, leaving a small negative current in the secondary winding. This small negative current brings back the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 4(b) by turning on Da again. Then the current is immediately restarts increasing toward zero, repeating the phase just before the first turn-off of Da. In this case, the path diodes Da and Db repeatedly turn on and off, and the secondary current is settles to zero, eventually making both of the diodes remain in the turn-off state.

If the sign of (11) is positive, the current is further increases beyond Irr2 after the turn-on of Db. In this case, the proposed converter maintains the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 4(c), and Lk and Cr start another half-cycle of resonance to discharge Cr from the peak voltage given by (9). Since there is no benefit to this extra resonance, this paper suggests avoiding it by making (11) negative in pursuit of simple and efficient operation.

Fig. 5.Reverse-recovery currents of diodes.

On-mode 3[t2~t3]: This mode is equivalent to the switch-on mode of the original TIB converter, as shown in Fig. 4(d). All of the diodes are in the off-state, and the magnetizing current im increases with a slope of Vi/Lm and finally reaches IM2 at the end of this mode at t=t3.

Off-mode 1[t3~t4]: This mode begins with the turn-off of M at t=t3. Neglecting the output capacitance of the diode, the path diode Db turns on immediately, and the leakage inductance Lk starts resonating with Cds to charge Cds up to the clamp voltage Vc with its initial current of IM2. However, this resonance can also be neglected since its characteristic impedance (Lk/Cds)1/2, where the value of Lk is in most cases much larger than that of Cds, can be assumed to be so much larger than 1 that there is negligible change in the resonant current from the initial value of IM2 while the voltage across Cds makes a large swing from zero to Vc. Therefore, this mode can be assumed to begin with the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 6(a), where the capacitance Cds is also neglected since it is in parallel with a much larger-valued Cc.

During this mode, the energy stored in Lk is discharged into Cc, and the primary current is transferred to the secondary side with a slope limited by Lk. To simplify the analysis, from this point on the voltage vr is assumed to maintain a constant value given by (9) during this mode.

This mode ends when all of the energy in Lk is discharged into Cc, and (12) becomes zero providing the zero current soft turn-off of Dc.

Off-mode 2[t4~t5]: This mode consists of two components: one is the high-frequency ac component caused by the resonance of Cds and Lk beginning with a fast decrease in vds from Vc, and the other one is the linear dc component representing a slow increase in vds caused by the discharge of Cr to the output. These two components are superposed so that the ac component is centered at the dc component, as shown in the interval of t4~t5 in Fig. 3, where the ac components are shown by dotted lines.

The peak of the vds waveform is bounded to Vc by Dc and Cc, while the valley is bounded to the ground by the body diode of M. As the dc component in vds increases, the ac component is pulled up toward the clamp voltage Vc, which results in the repetitive clamping of the ac component of vds to Vc. Therefore, the ac component as well as the associated parasitic losses in the circuit decay rapidly.

Fig. 6.Topological stages in Off-modes.

By neglecting the ac component, the equivalent circuit of this mode becomes as shown in Fig. 6(b). This mode ends when Cr is completely discharged, and the voltages across the switch M and output diode D1 reach Vc and zero, respectively.

The duration of this mode, denoted by t45, can be obtained from (14) as:

Off-mode 3[t5~t6]: The secondary current that was flowing through Db is switched to D1 at t=t5, providing the zero voltage soft turn-on of D1. The equivalent circuit is shown in Fig. 6(c), where Cds in parallel with Cc is neglected. In this mode, the clamp capacitor Cc resonates with Lk, and the charge lost by Cc in On-mode 2 is replenished. This mode ends when the diode Dc turns off with zero current after a half-cycle of resonance, resulting in the soft reset of the proposed snubber.

Since the assumption of a constant voltage on Cc makes it inappropriate to characterize this mode by setting up and solving differential equations, the charge balance in Cc is considered instead. Assume a sine current whose amplitude is unknown but whose angular frequency is equal to k/{N·(LkCc)1/2}, a half-cycle integration of this current flowing into Cc can be balanced with (10) to give the following key equations.

It should be noted that the charge gained by Cc through the clamping of vds in Off-modes 1 and 2, which is not considered in (17)-(19), in practice, has the effect of reducing the amount of charge that should be replenished in this mode for the snubber reset, consequently reducing the amplitudes of the sine terms in (17)-(19). The larger the charge gained in Off-modes 1 and 2, the smaller the peak of the resonant currents in Off-mode 3. This makes the operation of the circuit in this mode less affected by the snubber. Therefore, it can be said that the neglect of the charge gained by Cc through the clamping of vds in Off-modes 1 and 2 leads to a worst case analysis without depreciating (17)-(19).

Off-mode 4[t6~T]: This mode is identical to Pre-On-mode 1. The equivalent circuit is shown in Fig. 6(d). This mode ends with the turn-on of M at t=T. This completes one switching cycle of the proposed converter.

B. Steady-state analysis

The finite current slopes due to Lk in the proposed converter generate On-mode 1 and Off-mode 1. These modes occupy relatively small portions of one switching cycle. In addition, their contributions to the step-up ratio partially cancel each other out since they reduce both the on-duty and the off-duty. This will be further investigated in part of the next chapter. Therefore, in deriving the steady-state step-up ratio of the proposed converter, these two modes are neglected. Otherwise, the procedure and result become very complicated and do not give very useful insights.

Fig. 7.Waveform of primary winding voltage.

TABLE IVALUES FOR EACH INTERVAL

In order to apply the volt-second balance condition on Lm for one switching cycle, the voltage waveform across it, denoted by vp, is analyzed in Fig. 7, where On-mode 1 and Off-mode 1 are excluded as mentioned above. The duration of each interval and the corresponding average value of vp are shown in Table I. Summing all of the products of the expressions in each row of Table I and equating the result with zero result in:

Since the average voltage across Lk in On-mode 2, which can be obtained from (5), is zero, the magnetizing current can be considered to be linearly increasing all the way from IM1 to IM2 during On-modes 2 and 3, that is, IM2=IM1+ViDT/Lm. Then, the output current Io can be obtained by:

Solving (21) for IM2 and substituting the result into (20) gives:

Eliminating Vc in (22) by using (1) yields the step-up ratio of the proposed converter as:

where α is as given in (22).

It can be seen from (23) that the parameter α plays a role in increasing the effective duty ratio of the proposed converter. This makes the proposed converter show a higher step-up ratio than the original TIB converter. It can be also seen that a smaller value of Cr or a larger value of Io/Vi results in a smaller value of α. In an extreme case where α=0, (23) becomes the step-up ratio of the original TIB converter.

 

III. DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

Various conditions validating the analysis in the previous chapter are presented in this chapter. Some characteristics of the proposed converter are also discussed in detail. To achieve a seamless flow of the analysis, the validity of (23) will be assumed for the time being. However, in a later part of this chapter, it will be verified by simulation results.

A. No-discharge of Cr in On-mode

In order to make Cr not discharge through an extra resonance mode after being charged to its peak voltage in On-mode 2, the sign of (11) is required to be negative as explained in On-mode 2. This condition can be simplified in terms of Vo/Vi as:

This defines the lower boundary of the step-up ratio. The right-hand side of (24) has a minimum value of 9 at N=3 and it becomes larger as N increases or decreases.

B. Continuity of is

Due to the resonant charging current of Cc in Off-mode 3, a current droop appears in the secondary current is as shown in the t=t5~t6 interval of Fig. 3. This droop is represented by the sine term in (19). If this droop is too large to maintain the secondary current continuous, the proposed converter enters a mode similar to the discontinuous current mode, and the output voltage becomes significantly higher than that predicted by (23). However, this is beyond the scope of this paper, and it should be avoided by the following condition:

Eliminating IM2 in (25) using (20) gives a relationship which makes it more convenient to determine the continuity of is as:

This defines the upper boundary condition for the step-up ratio.

C. Soft Reset of the Snubber

If the duty ratio of the proposed converter is too large, the switch can turn on prematurely before Lk and Cc complete their half-cycle of resonance to make the resonant current in Dc zero. In this case, the peak resonant current automatically increases to maintain the charge balance in Cc as the switching cycle continues. This does not significantly change the average behavior of the proposed converter over one switching cycle. However, this hard reset of the proposed snubber needs to be avoided since the clamp diode Dc in this case fails in achieving soft turn-off which results in an increase in associated side effects such as switching loss and electric noise.

To make sure that the proposed snubber can achieve a soft reset in Off-mode 3, the sum of the time required for Cr to completely discharge in Off-mode 2 and the time required for Lk and Cc to complete a half-cycle of resonance in Off-mode 3 should be shorter than (1–D)T. This condition can be obtained from (16) and ω2 in Off-mode 3 as:

By eliminating IM2 in (27) using (20), another upper boundary condition for the step-up ratio of the proposed converter to ensure the soft reset of the snubber can be obtained as:

D. Characteristic Analysis

In order to make the analysis of the proposed converter more convenient and illustrative, the practical parameters are assumed to be Vi=12V, f=100kHz, N=3, Lm=80μH, Cc=330nF, and Cr=4.7nF. Fig. 8 shows the step-up ratio of the proposed converter in comparison with that of the original TIB converter. The solid lines represent the analytic step-up ratios obtained from (23) for different values of Io. The short-dashed lines represent the simulated step-up ratios obtained from SPICE simulations for the same values of Io, where Lk=2μH is assumed. The dash-dot and dotted lines represent the upper boundaries given by (26) and (28) for the secondary current continuity and soft reset of the snubber, respectively. The long-dashed line is the lower boundary given by (24) with no discharge of Cr during the on-mode. Fig. 8 can be explained from the following standpoints.

Fig. 8.Step-up ratios and boundary conditions.

1) Effect of Lk: Fig. 8 shows that there is a large difference between the analytic and simulated step-up ratios of the conventional TIB converter. This can be explained by using Fig. 9, where the solid and dotted lines represent the secondary current is and the drain voltage vds of each converter from the moment the switch turns off. The turn-off delay, denoted by toff-dly, is defined for each converter by the time required for is to rise from zero to the steady-state value of IM2/k.

Fig. 9.Turn-off transient waveforms of is and vds.

As already explained in Off-mode 1, the drain voltage vds of the proposed converter is assumed to be clamped at Vc as soon as the switch turns off. The voltage across Lk is also clamped since all of the voltages at the tapped-inductor terminals are clamped as shown in Fig. 6(a). Therefore, all of the winding currents vary linearly with slopes determined by the value of Lk and the voltage across it. The slope of is is also shown in Fig. 9(a). Assuming the voltage across Cr is kept constant during the turn-off transient caused by Lk, the turn-off delay of the proposed converter, denoted by toff-dly(prop.), can be obtained as:

On the other hand, in the original TIB converter, Lk and Cds freely resonate after the switch turns off, as shown in Fig. 9(b), since the drain voltage vds is not limited. The time required for the current is to reach the steady-state value of IM2/k, denoted by toff-dly(conv.) is equal to 0.5π(LkCds)1/2. This corresponds to a quarter-cycle of resonance. This is much shorter than toff-dly(prop.) given in (29).

Meanwhile, the turn-on delay, defined by the time required for is to reach zero after the switch turns on, can be obtained for the proposed converter from (3) as:

Since no snubber elements are associated with (30), the turn-on delay of the original TIB converter can be expressed by (30) and it can be considered equal to that of the proposed converter neglecting a small difference in IM1.

The turn-off delay reduces the off-duty of the converter and adds a small positive volt-second on the primary winding, resulting in a slight increase in the step-up ratio. On the other hand, the turn-on delay reduces the on-duty of the converter and adds a small negative volt-second on the primary winding, resulting in a slight decrease in the step-up ratio. In the proposed converter, the effects of the turn-on delay and the turn-off delay partially cancel each other out since the turn-off delay is relatively large. However, in the original TIB converter, this barely happens since the turn-off delay is very small. This makes the step-up ratio of the proposed converter less affected by Lk. Therefore, the original TIB converter shows a large difference between the analytic step-up ratio, where Lk is neglected, and its simulated counterpart, where Lk is taken into account.

2) No discharge of Cr in the on-mode: Assuming N=3, (24) gives a minimum step-up ratio of 9, which is shown by the long-dashed line in Fig. 8. Outside this boundary, which corresponds to a step-up ratio lower than 9, an extra resonance takes place to partially discharge Cr, resulting in a reduced voltage across Cr at the end of the on-modes. This also results in a reduction in the time required for the complete discharge of Cr given by (16) in Off-mode 2. As can be seen from Fig. 7, a decrease in t45 adds a small negative volt-second on the primary winding, resulting in a slight decrease in the step-up ratio. This is not considered when deriving the analytic step-up ratio of (23). Therefore, a simulated step-up ratio outside this boundary decreases faster with a decreasing D than its analytic counterpart, as shown in Fig. 8.

3) Soft reset of the snubber: Fig. 10 compares the soft reset and hard reset of the proposed snubber. In the soft reset case, the primary current ip starts increasing from IM1/k at t=t0 and reaches IM1 at t=t1. In the hard reset case, the switch prematurely turns on at t=t0' before Lk and Cc complete their half-cycle of resonance. Therefore, the primary current starts increasing from a value higher than IM1/k and reaches IM1 at t=t1'. Since the slope of ip after the switch turn-on is the same in both cases, the time required for ip to reach IM1 from the switch turn-on is shorter in case of the hard reset. This in effect reduces the turn-on delay defined by On-mode 1 and adds a small positive volt-second on the primary winding, resulting in a slight increase in the step-up ratio. This is shown in Fig. 8, where the boundary condition given by (28) for the soft reset of the snubber is shown by a dotted line. Outside this boundary, the proposed converter performs the hard reset. Therefore, the simulated step-up ratio increases slightly faster with an increasing D than its analytic counterpart in which the snubber hard reset is not considered.

Fig. 10.Soft reset and hard reset of proposed snubber.

4) Continuity of is: By comparing the step-up ratio given by (23) and the boundary condition for the continuity of is given by (26), it can be easily seen that they have very similar forms, and that their traces would also have very similar shapes if they came close to each other. Due to this similarity between (23) and (26), there is no meaningful intersection between them, and the range of the step-up ratio retaining the continuity of is cannot be well defined. Therefore, this paper suggests designing the proposed converter so that the boundary given by (26) is placed far above the operating condition as exemplified in Fig. 8.

5) Trends of boundary conditions: The analytic step-up ratios of the proposed converter for different values of N are illustrated in Fig. 11 together with all of the boundary conditions presented in this paper. Since the proposed converter is for use in high-step applications, the smallest value of N is chosen to be 3. The output current is assumed to be 0.24A, and all of the other parameters are the same to those used in Fig. 8.

As the turns ratio N increases, the minimum duty ratio for no discharge of Cr in the on-modes shows a decreasing tendency as denoted by P1, P2, and P3, and so does the maximum duty ratio for the soft reset of the proposed snubber as denoted by P4, P5, and P6. The boundary for the continuity of is, which is already high enough, becomes even higher as N increases.

Fig. 11.Trends of boundaries according to N (Io=0.24A).

 

IV. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS

A prototype of the proposed converter has been built for a 120V/240mA LED lighting module. The input voltage ranges from 9V to 12V depending on the off-grid power system loaded by a 12V battery, and the required step-up ratio ranges from 10 to 13.3. In light of Fig. 11, the tapped-inductor turns ratio is designed as N=3, and the operating duty ratio ranges from 0.66 to 0.72. The switching frequency is chosen to be 100kHz. The tapped-inductor is designed to have a magnetizing inductance of 80μH and it is made with highly productive separate windings to have good insulation and low capacitance between windings. The leakage inductance is measured to be 2.4μH. Since the switch voltage is minimized in the proposed converter, a 60V-rated AOD442 with RDS(ON)=20mΩ is chosen as the switch. A 400V/1A-rated ES1G is chosen as the boost diode, and 100V/1A-rated MBRS1100s are chosen as the clamp and path diodes. The snubber capacitors are designed as Cc=330nF and Cr=4.7nF. The key parameters are summarized in Table II.

TABLE IIKEY PARAMETERS

The operating waveforms at the rated input voltage of 12V are shown in Figs. 12 and 13. The operating duty ratio is 0.68, and the measured efficiency is 97%. The continuous switch drain voltage is measured to be 39.2V as expected by (1), and the peak switch drain voltage, which is caused by parasitic inductances between the components, is measured to be 50.3V. All of the waveforms match well with the theoretical waveforms shown in Fig. 3. In addition, the operation and features of the proposed converter such as the minimum switch voltage stress, soft-switching of the switching devices, relaxation of the diode reverse-recoveries, and the soft reset of the snubber are all verified.

Fig. 12.Key experimental waveforms.

Fig. 13.Additional experimental waveforms.

For a comparison with the original TIB converter without a snubber, the switch of the proposed converter is replaced by a 200V-rated AOD2210 with RDS(ON)=105mΩ. The efficiency is 94.5%, which is lower than the previous result of 97%. This is due to increased conduction loss since the AOD2210 has a higher RDS(ON) than the AOD442. The proposed converter is then converted into the original TIB converter by removing all of the snubber elements and adjusting the duty cycle to be 0.72 to maintain the output voltage. An extra 470pF capacitor is added between the switch drain and source to keep the voltage spike from becoming too high by exceeding 600V. The efficiency of this original TIB converter is measured to be 91.5%, which is lower than the previous result of 94.5%. This is due to the increased switching loss. The results are summarized in Table III. The key loss factors affecting the results are also shown in the table.

TABLE IIIMEASURED EFFICIENCY

 

V. CONCLUSIONS

For emerging high step-up applications in off-grid areas, a passive lossless snubber for the continuous current mode TIB converter is proposed. In the proposed converter, the switch voltage is minimized so that a more inexpensive and efficient device can be selected. Soft-switching is also provided for the switching devices, resulting in a further improvement in the efficiency. Since the leakage inductance is fully utilized, there is no need to minimize it, which allows for a cost-effective and highly productive design of the tapped-inductor. In addition, the proposed converter has a high step-up ratio and provides relaxation of the diode reverse-recovery.

In this paper, the operation principle and characteristics of the proposed converter are analyzed in detail. In addition, various boundary conditions that need to be considered in the design are presented. Some experimental results are also presented to confirm the operation and features of the proposed converter.

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