Title :
A Stable Mode-Transition Technique for a Digitally Controlled Non-Inverting Buck–Boost DC–DC Converter
Author :
Chien-Hung Tsai ; Yu-Shin Tsai ; Han-Chien Liu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Cheng Kung Univ., Tainan, Taiwan
Abstract :
The propagation delay of a comparator and dead time causes the duty-discontinuity region near the boundary of the step-down and step-up regions in a non-inverting buck-boost (NIBB) converter. The duty-discontinuity region leads to an unstable output voltage and an unpredictable output voltage ripple, which might cause the entire power system to shut down. In this paper, a mode-transition technique called duty-lock control is proposed for a digitally controlled NIBB converter. It locks the duty cycle and eliminates the error between the output voltage and the reference signal by using a proposed fixed reference scheme that ensures the stability of the digital controller and output voltage. The experimental results that were applied to a field-programmable gate array-based platform revealed that the output voltage of the NIBB converter is stable throughout the entire transition region, without any efficiency tradeoffs. The input voltage of the converter that was provided by a Li-ion battery was 2.7-4.2 V, and the output voltage was 1.0-3.6 V, which is suitable for radio-frequency power amplifiers. The switching frequency was 500 kHz, and the maximum load current was 450 mA.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; control engineering computing; digital control; field programmable gate arrays; power engineering computing; radiofrequency power amplifiers; secondary cells; voltage regulators; NIBB converter; comparator propagation delay; current 450 mA; dead time propagation delay; digital controller stability; digitally controlled noninverting buck-boost DC-DC converter; duty-discontinuity region; duty-lock control; error elimination; field-programmable gate array-based platform; fixed reference scheme; frequency 500 kHz; lithium-ion battery; output voltage stability; radio-frequency power amplifiers; stable mode-transition technique; step-down regions; step-up regions; transition region; voltage 1.0 V to 3.6 V; voltage 2.7 V to 4.2 V; Batteries; Estimation; Inductors; Power amplifiers; Pulse width modulation; Switches; Voltage control; Digital controller; duty discontinuity; mode-transition technique; non-inverting buck???boost (NIBB) converter;
Journal_Title :
Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIE.2014.2327565