Title :
A constant-power battery charger with inherent soft switching and power factor correction
Author :
Poon, N.K. ; Pong, Bryan M H ; Tse, Chi K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Univ. of Hong Kong, China
Abstract :
A battery charging circuit, which operates as a constant power source, is proposed in this paper. By maintaining a constant output power throughout the charging process, the circuit reduces the size of thermal installation which would normally be required in the cases of constant-voltage or constant-current charging. The proposed circuit takes the form of a half-bridge converter with an additional small inductor and two extra diodes connected in parallel to two dividing capacitors. Constant power delivery is achieved by the discontinuous-voltage-mode operation of the two dividing capacitors, each of which is connected in parallel with a diode. The circuit enjoys low voltage and current stresses, and achieves soft switching with no extra components. When used off-line, the converter maintains a high input power factor and a low level of input current harmonic distortion that meets international regulations. All the above characteristics are determined only by the values of the circuit parameters, the control mechanism being noncritical. A 12 V 65 W prototype was built to demonstrate the merits of this circuit.
Keywords :
battery chargers; bridge circuits; capacitors; inductors; power factor correction; power semiconductor diodes; switching circuits; 12 V; 65 W; charging process; constant output power; constant power delivery; constant power source; constant-current charging; constant-power battery charger; constant-voltage charging; control mechanism; diodes; discontinuous-voltage-mode operation; dividing capacitors; half-bridge converter; high input power factor; inductor; inherent soft switching; input current harmonic distortion; international regulations; power factor correction; soft switching; thermal installation; Batteries; Diodes; Inductors; Low voltage; Power factor correction; Power generation; Reactive power; Stress; Switched capacitor circuits; Switching circuits;
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2003.818823