Renovator1
Industrial
- Mar 14, 2003
- 72
I'm having a tough time visualizing how this might work so I thought I'd pose the idea to the resident geniuses of eng-tips 
Each phase in the typical multiphase buck converter has its own inductor which then feeds a common output capacitor while a single control loop adjusts the duty cycle to regulate the output voltage.
But what if the load is already highly inductive (ie - an electromagnet) and that it is the output current, not voltage, that needs to be regulated?
It seems to me that you could then eliminate the output capacitor and, more importantly, the individual phase inductors... I suspect, however, that each phase would then need its own current control loop to make sure the total load current is shared equally among the n phases.
What's tripping me up is that I know that if the "phases" are all switched at the same time - ie, all of the switches are in parallel - this configuration works just fine. It's when I try to visualize what might happen if the switches are operated in sequence (though with overlapping operation possible, of course) that my head starts hurting.
Oh, and the reason I'm giving myself a headache here is that using n phases rather than the same number of switches in parallel reduces the ripple current in the dc link.
Thanks!
Each phase in the typical multiphase buck converter has its own inductor which then feeds a common output capacitor while a single control loop adjusts the duty cycle to regulate the output voltage.
But what if the load is already highly inductive (ie - an electromagnet) and that it is the output current, not voltage, that needs to be regulated?
It seems to me that you could then eliminate the output capacitor and, more importantly, the individual phase inductors... I suspect, however, that each phase would then need its own current control loop to make sure the total load current is shared equally among the n phases.
What's tripping me up is that I know that if the "phases" are all switched at the same time - ie, all of the switches are in parallel - this configuration works just fine. It's when I try to visualize what might happen if the switches are operated in sequence (though with overlapping operation possible, of course) that my head starts hurting.
Oh, and the reason I'm giving myself a headache here is that using n phases rather than the same number of switches in parallel reduces the ripple current in the dc link.
Thanks!