Title :
Fast Load Transient Regulation of Low-Voltage Converters with the Low-Voltage Transient Processor
Author :
Lambert, William J. ; Ayyanar, Rajapandian ; Chickamenahalli, Shamala
Author_Institution :
Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
fDate :
7/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The transient response of DC-DC converters with large conversion ratios is limited by the asymmetry of the current slew rate through the magnetic elements; under appropriate control, such a converter may respond much faster to an increase in load current than a decrease, or vice versa. In this paper, a low-voltage, unloaded, bidirectional DC-DC converter with a very fast current slew rate, called the low-voltage transient processor (LVTP), is placed in shunt across the output of a conventional DC-DC converter (the ldquoprimary regulatorrdquo) to equalize the effective current slew rate (the combination of the LVTP and primary regulator) seen at the load, so that the transient response to a load increase is the same as the response to a load decrease. The LVTP operates at very low voltages, enabling the use of small magnetic components with low losses even at high-frequency operation, allowing the overall efficiency of the system to be high. To demonstrate the concept, a 3 MHz bidirectional buck LVTP prototype was implemented and placed at the output of a 12-1.2 V microprocessor voltage regulator (VR). The VR with LVTP matched the performance of VRD10.1 VR reference design with half (4.10 mF) of the output capacitance of the original design.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; low-power electronics; transient analysis; DC-DC converters; bidirectional buck LVTP prototype; fast current slew rate; fast load transient regulation; high-frequency operation; low-voltage converters; low-voltage transient processor; magnetic components; magnetic elements; microprocessor voltage regulator; slew rate; small magnetic components; transient response; Capacitance; Circuit topology; Cost function; Inductors; Low voltage; Microprocessors; Regulators; Saturation magnetization; Transient response; Virtual reality; Transient compensator; voltage regulator (VR); voltage regulator module (VRM);
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2009.2017535