JAJU510H March 2018 – December 2022
Modern commercial scale solar inverters are seeing innovation on two fronts, which lead to smaller, higher efficiency products on the market:
By increasing the voltage to 1000-V or 1500-V DC from the array, the current can be reduced to maintain the same power levels. This reduction in current results in less copper and smaller power conducting devices required in the design. The reduction in di/dt also reduces the stress on electrical components. However, sustained DC voltages of > 1 kV can be difficult to design to, or even find components that can survive it.
To compensate for the voltage stresses generated by high-voltage solar arrays, new topologies of solar inverters have been designed. Traditional half bridges block the full input voltage on each switching device. By adding additional switched blocking and conduction components, the overall stress on the device can be significantly reduced. This reference design shows how to implement a three-level converter. Higher level converters are also possible, further increasing the voltage handling capability.
Additional power density in solar electronics is also being enabled by moving to higher switching speeds in the power converters. As this design shows, even a modestly higher switching speed reduces the overall size requirement of the output filter stage—a primary contributor to the design size.
Traditional switching devices have a limit in how quickly they can switch high voltages, or more appropriately, the dV/dt ability of the device. This slow ramp up and down increases conduction loss because the device spends more time in a switching state. This increased switch time also increases the amount of dead time required in the control system to prevent shoot-through and shorts. The solution to this has been developed in newer switching semiconductor technology like SiC and GaN devices with high electron mobility. This reference design uses SiC MOSFETs alongside TI's SiC gate driver technology to demonstrate the potential increase in power density.
Similarly for Onboard Chargers (OBC) higher power chargers (11 kW and 22 kW) are increasingly required. For which three phase PFC is necessary, this design shows implementation of three phase PFC using DQ control and presents the complete control loop model.