Title :
Generalized Technique of Compensating Low-Frequency Component of Load Current With a Parallel Bidirectional DC/DC Converter
Author :
Dusmez, Serkan ; Khaligh, Alireza
Author_Institution :
Comput. Eng. Dept., Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
Abstract :
The first stage of a battery charger in electric vehicles is a power factor correction (PFC) circuit, which creates a second harmonic in the dc link. This harmonic is typically filtered through a bulky dc-link capacitor. In the conventional battery chargers, another dc/dc stage is utilized to regulate the battery current. In this paper, the second harmonic in the dc link is analyzed in detail and a new load current compensation technique is proposed. The proposed technique replaces the second stage dc/dc converter with a bidirectional dc/dc converter connected in parallel with the load, and requires a secondary energy source, i.e., a small-size capacitor. The capacitor injects 180° phase-shifted second harmonic current to the dc link. Thus, the dc-link capacitor can be reduced significantly as it is only sized for high-frequency ripples rather than being sized for low-frequency content. The proposed method is generalized for resistive and battery loads with voltage- and current-source PFC circuits. A 360 W prototype is developed to experimentally verify the proposed technique. A 72 V/10 A·h battery module is charged by filtering an oscillating power of 360 W using a two-quadrant bidirectional dc/dc converter and an UC module, demonstrating a peak charging current of 16 A.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; battery chargers; battery powered vehicles; capacitors; compensation; harmonic analysis; power factor correction; PFC circuits; battery charger; battery current; battery module; current 16 A; dc-link capacitor; electric vehicles; energy source; filtering; high-frequency ripples; load current compensation technique; low-frequency component compensation; oscillating power; phase-shifted second harmonic current; power 360 W; power factor correction circuit; two-quadrant bidirectional d-dc converter; Active filters; Batteries; Capacitors; DC-DC power converters; Inductors; Power harmonic filters; Rectifiers; AC/DC rectifier; battery current regulation; charger; electric vehicles (EVs); power electronics; power factor correction (PFC); ripple cancellation; ultracapacitor (UC);
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2014.2298432