A Two-stage Piezoelectric Resonator and Switched Capacitor DC-DC Converter


Book Description

Power converters are used in virtually every area of our lives from electric vehicle charging stations to television screens. Presently, magnetics pose a challenge for miniaturization as they fundamentally decrease in achievable power density at small scales. Our solution to this problem is to remove magnetic components altogether and instead design power converters based on piezoelectric resonators (PRs) and capacitors as the main passive elements. In previous work, we have demonstrated that PRs have high efficiencies and power density capabilities operating as dc-dc voltage regulators, but that these advantages wane for high step down ratios. Alternatively, utilizing capacitors in a switch capacitor (SC) network can provide high step down ratios with high power densities and efficiencies, but only for specific conversion ratios. By connecting the PR and SC converters together, there is an opportunity for each stage to address the drawbacks of the other in order to create a high power density and high efficiency power converter that can provide good voltage regulation and a high step down ratio. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate, simulate, and build a two-stage converter using a piezoelectric resonator and switched capacitor converter.







Hybrid Switched-capacitor Power Converter Techniques


Book Description

Power conversion is a necessity in almost all modern electric systems and machines: energy must be regulated and delivered in the intended manner if a system is to perform well, or at all. Power converters, the electronic circuits used to control this energy flow, have been a subject of intense study and rapid development in recent years and are widely acknowledged to be a fundamental enabler for modern day human societal capabilities. Many market sectors have strongly advocated for further development of energy conversion systems with improved efficiency and power density as these traits often directly dictate practical viability. While advancements in semiconductor device physics have yielded improved parts for use inconverter solutions, it is becoming apparent that there is additional massive potential and merit in revisiting fundamental converter topologies and circuit techniques. To date, power converters that use capacitors as their primary energy transfer elements (termed "switchedcapacitor" power converters) are far less ubiquitous than their switched-inductor counterparts, and seemingly for good reason: characteristics such as poor output regulation and intrinsic transient inrush currents that lead to inefficiency have largely prevented switched-capacitor topologies from gaining practical consideration in general power converter markets. Solutions to these negative attributes are strongly desired as capacitors can offer energy densities up to three orders of magnitude greater than inductors, with these energy transfer elements typically consuming the majority of a power converter's weight/volume. Recent work has demonstrated significant potential for hybrid switched-capacitor-inductor converter techniques: here, small inductive element(s) are used to eliminate the conventional drawbacks of a converter which is predominantly capacitor based. The hybridized approach helps unlock the full potential of capacitor-based converters and has been demonstrated to offer compelling results at the cost of added complexity. This work offers an exploration into a collection of state-of-the-art power converter techniques and topological methods, primarily within the field of hybridized switched-capacitor-inductor converters. The first two chapters give a background on fundamental considerations such as conventional loss mechanisms and the slow-switching-limit (SSL), as well as several established loss mitigation techniques. An integrated converter system and its associated functional blocks is then discussed in Chapters 3 and 4, exemplifying a hybridized two-stage converter and illustrating the implementation of several loss mitigation methods and practical circuit techniques. Next, several hybridized variations of the Dickson topology are discussed: this family of DC-DC converters is well suited for non-isolated large voltage conversion ratios. A number of these variants are proposed here for the first time, illustrating significant potential for further converter development. The steady-state bias points, resonant switching frequency, duty cycle and voltage ripple as a function of load are calculated for several example converters, including the non-trivial case of a converter undergoing split-phase operation and whose operating points exhibit a strong load dependence. To facilitate comparative analysis between topologies, a mathematical method is presented that characterizes the total energy density utilization of fly capacitors throughout a converter, accounting for large voltage ripple and iii highly nonlinear reverse-bias transitions. This analysis assists with optimal topology selection as energy density utilization directly dictates the required capacitor volume at a specified power level and switching frequency. An expanded family of fly capacitor networks is then introduced in Chapter 6; here it is shown that there are a large number of unexplored yet practical fly capacitor configurations that are eligible for use in hybridized converters. It is calculated that a 6-7 % reduction in capacitor volume can be achieved relative to conventional Dickson fly capacitor networks, while preserving the desirable characteristic of equal voltage ripple on its branches. N-phase and split-phase switching methods and their respective trade-offs are then discussed in detail, offering control techniques that allow a departure from conventional two-phase operation while retaining high-efficiency zero-voltage and zero-current switching (ZVS/ZCS) conditions. A Cockcroft-Walton prototype demonstrates both methods implemented on the same piece of hardware, significantly improving the efficiency range with respect to load and resulting in a state-of-the-art power density of 483.3 kW/liter (7, 920W/inch3). Next, a method termed "resonant charge redistribution" (RCR) is proposed that greatly reduces output capacitance (C[subscript OSS]) related switching losses in all switches of a complex switched-capacitor network. Despite little effort being put towards optimization, a prototype using RCR measures a 61 % reduction in total losses at light load for a near negligible 0.74 % increase in total solution volume. Lastly, resonant gate drive techniques are discussed. Here, within a proposed resonant gate-driver topology, a capacitive decoupling technique is demonstrated that allows power to be delivered to a "flying" high-side N-channel device which commutes between two variable voltages. The implemented prototype achieves up to a 72 % reduction in gating loss when switching over 20 MHz and with rise/fall times ≤ 7 ns. Combining several of the novel techniques described herein can result in near complete mitigation of all primary switching loss mechanisms observed throughout the complex structure of a switched-capacitor converter network. This relatively new field of hybridized converter design has already yielded converters with record-breaking performance, as is demonstrated here. With contemporary techniques, including those described in this work, the field of power electronics is on the cusp of seeing widespread dramatic improvements in energy handling capability, power density, specific power and efficiency at reduced cost, with huge potential for growth and improved energy consumption in both developed and emerging markets.




Reconfigurable Switched-Capacitor Power Converters


Book Description

This book provides readers specializing in ultra-low power supply design for self-powered applications an invaluable reference on reconfigurable switched capacitor power converters. Readers will benefit from a comprehensive introduction to the design of robust power supplies for energy harvesting and self-power applications, focusing on the use of reconfigurable switched capacitor based DC-DC converters, which is ideal for such applications. Coverage includes all aspects of switched capacitor power supply designs, from fundamentals, to reconfigurable power stages, and sophisticated controller designs.







Integrated Hybrid Resonant DCDC Converters


Book Description

This book provides a comprehensive, single-source on resonant switched-capacitor converters. It is written in the style of a handbook, with systematic guidelines, and includes implementation examples. The authors explore integrated hybrid resonant DCDC converters in order to achieve highly compact, energy efficient and cost-effective power management solutions in the growing fields of wearables and internet-of-things applications. They provide an introduction into hybrid converters as a new and promising converter class, which merges capacitive and inductive conversion concepts into one. Coverage ranges from fundamentals to implementation details, including topics such as power stage design, gate drive schemes, different control mechanisms for resonant operation and integrated passives. Introduces a new, multi-ratio resonant converter architecture, which enables lower switching frequencies and better passive component utilization; Discusses circuit block design for high efficiency of the power stage; Explores implementation details and concepts for integrated passives; Derives models, implements and compares to each other different control mechanisms.




A Merged Two-stage Power Conversion Architecture with Switched Capacitor Circuit for an LED Driver Module


Book Description

In a power converter specified to convert from wide-range and high-level DC voltage or AC line voltage to low-level DC voltage, satisfying high efficiency, high power density, and high power factor is challenging because of the higher device stress and difficulty of maintaining ZVS/ZCS conditions. Our purpose of the proposed two-stage power conversion architecture is to manage this high peak voltage stress and widely-varying operating conditions and to reduce dissipation by placing a switched capacitor pre-regulator stage in front of a very high frequency DC-DC converter stage. Our proposed two-stage architecture has been designed, built, and tested.




Design of Area- and Power-efficient Dual-output Switched-capacitor DC-DC Converters


Book Description

Power management integrated circuits have found wide applications in all battery-powered electronic systems like smartphones, wireless sensors, etc., to convert a time-varying unregulated battery voltage to constant regulated DC output voltages for different internal functional blocks of the system. With the increase in the complexity of today’s electronic systems, a multiple-output power management system is desired to optimize the power consumption of each loading block such that the power dissipation of the whole system can be minimized to extend the battery run-time. Driven by the demands for high power efficiency and high area efficiency in generating multiple outputs for energy-harvesting and portable applications, the multiple-output switched-capacitor (SC) DC-DC converter is becoming a popular candidate as it does not require any costly and bulky inductor for energy storage, thereby minimizing the overall converter volume and EMI noise. Moreover, flying capacitors as energy-storage components and power transistors as energy-transfer paths in the multiple-output SC DC-DC converters can be shared by different outputs such that the number of required flying capacitors and power transistors can be minimized to optimize both area efficiency and energy density. In the first part of this research, a reconfigurable step-up dual-output SC DC-DC regulator is introduced, analyzed and verified for low power energy-harvesting applications. A sub-harmonic adaptive-on-time (SHAOT) control scheme is proposed to improve the light-load power efficiency under different load currents, maintain low output ripples under different input voltages, provide predictable output noise spectrum, and minimize output cross regulation between both outputs in the SC DC-DC regulator. In the second part of this research, a battery-connected reconfigurable step-down dual-output SC DC-DC regulator is developed to deliver a maximum load of 1.2A for portable applications. With flying-capacitor sharing and an all-nMOS power stage, the proposed dual-output SC power stage is efficient in both chip and board areas. A switch-resistance-modulation (SRM) control scheme is also proposed to provide small output voltage ripples with a small load capacitance under 100s-of-mA load and to minimize output cross regulation between two outputs under large load-step variations.




Design Space Evaluation for Resonant and Hard-charged Switched Capacitor Converters


Book Description

USB Power Delivery enables a fixed ratio converter to operate over a wider range of output voltages by varying the input voltage. Of the DC/DC step-down converters powered from this type of USB, the hard-charged Switched Capacitor circuit is of interest to industry for its potential high power density. However implementation can be limited by circuit efficiency. In fully resonant mode, the efficiency can be improved while also enabling current regulation. This expands the possible applications into battery chargers and eliminates the need for a two-stage converter. In this work, the trade-off in power loss and area between the hard-charged and fully resonant switched capacitor circuit is explored using a technique that remains agnostic to inductor technology. The loss model for each converter is presented as well as discussion on the restrained design space due to parasitics in the passive components. The results are validated experimentally using GaN-based prototype converters and the respective design spaces are analyzed.