Tesis
Análise e projeto do conversor buck intercalado para alimentação de lâmpadas de descarga em alta pressão de alta potência
Fecha
2012-02-29Registro en:
SCHITTLER, Andressa Colvero. Interleaved buck converter analysis for high power high intensity discharge lamps supplying. 2012. 86 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Engenharia Elétrica) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2012.
Autor
Schittler, Andressa Colvero
Institución
Resumen
This work presents a detailed analysis about the interleaved buck converter applied
to electronic ballasts to supply high power HID lamps, assuming the input voltage as a
PFC stage output.
As the output capacitor has a maximum value to be applied in parallel with the lamp,
parallel operated converters are a suitable choice because the output current ripple cancellation
characteristic. Besides, the output current ripple cannot be greater than 5% of
the nominal current to avoid acoustic resonance phenomena. Also, interleaved converters
allow magnetic and semiconductors losses reduction.
The applied topology was the interleaved buck converter, because its inherent characteritstic
of the output as a current source. A generalized model for the IBC operating in
CCM was obtained, including inductors and semiconductors losses, besides an analysis to
achieve the optimum point of design in terms of efficiency, size and complexity of implementation.
To apply the IBC in CCM supplying HID lamps, it is necessary inductors current
control, which means to guarantee a current source behavior of the converter. For that,
two current control loop were designed, one for each inductor being measured via a shunt
resistor located at the circuit input. Also, stability was analyzed based on impedance
criterion.
Finally, complete electronic ballast was presented, gathering a two-cell IBC, full-bridge
inverter, measuring circuits for current and voltage and an external circuit for the correct
delay of the IBC MOSFETs gate signals. Obtained experimental results were satisfatory,
showing equal current sharing, once warm-up stage and closed-loop implementation were
via an 8-bits microcontroller.