Riccardo Ruffo and Vedatroyee Ghosh
Energy sustainability and security concerns are accelerating demand for energy storage systems, particularly in residential solar installations. There are microinverters with integrated energy storage systems on the market with power as high as 2kW. When a system requires higher power, there are string inverters or hybrid string inverters that also have an energy storage system connected.
Figure 1 is a block diagram of a hybrid string inverter. A common regulated DC bus interconnects the fundamental blocks. A hybrid string inverter comprises these subblocks:
String inverters consist of power switches such as insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs). This kind of power device has issues such as tail current and diode reverse recovery, which lead to high switching losses. Furthermore, these phenomena are affected by temperature, leading to higher power losses, especially for static-cooled solutions. Therefore, these power devices need to run at low frequencies, requiring bulkier passives and a bulkier heat sink. Typically, the switching frequency can range from 5kHz to 15kHz.
Wide-bandgap power switches such as gallium nitride (GaN) have no minority carrier phenomenon, thus enabling a reduction in switching losses. Decreased switching losses enable an increase in switching frequencies by maintaining the same system losses, therefore allowing a reduction in passive components. On average, the switching frequency increases by a factor of six.
This article proposes a 10kW string inverter based on GaN field-effect transistors (FETs). We will also explore the benefits of GaN and highlight the advantages of building such a system for residential solar applications.
Figure 2 illustrates the 10kW, GaN-Based Single-Phase String Inverter with Battery Energy Storage System Reference Design, including all active and passive components.
Figure 3 is a schematic representation of the converter.
The reference design consists of four power-conversion systems operating at different switching frequencies:
The ability to cool 650V-rated 30mΩ LMG3522R030 GaN FETs on the top side results in smaller thermal impedance than a bottom side-cooled device. These FETs have integrated gate drivers that reduce solution costs and make the design smaller.
As Figure 3 illustrates, a single MCU controls the reference design. The TMS320F28P550SJ allows the real-time control of four power-conversion stages, protections, and the implementation of multiple control loops. It is possible to refer the MCU to power ground (GND DC–). Direct control of the GaN FET is also possible because of the integrated gate driver. Isolated gate drivers are not required for the bottom side (Q1A, Q1B, Q2, Q4, Q6, Q7).
The system requires current measurements at different points for the different converter stages. The boost converters measure the current with a shunt-based solution such as the INA181 on the negative rail because the MCU is referred to power ground. In the interleaved converter, you need to measure the current in the battery with high accuracy over time and temperature with a device such as the AMC1302, which is a precision current-sensing reinforced isolated amplifier. The 5V generated by the internal GaN low-dropout regulator supplies the current-sense amplifier. In the inverter stage, a Hall-effect current sensor such as the TMCS1123 enables grid current measurements. Its high bandwidth and accuracy facilitate an important reduction in the current THD.
We operated the reference design with these system voltages:
We collected these efficiencies when the converter worked in different scenarios:
The graphs show that even when switching six times faster than a standard IGBT solution, overall efficiency is still comparable to a present-day IGBT solution. Efficiency remained close to 98% when including the housekeeping power supply. All three figures include the two power-conversion stages.
GaN helps achieve greater power density, thus reducing the weight of the final end equipment. With an overall system efficiency close to 98% and a power density of 2.3kW/L, the string inverter reference design demonstrates great performance. In addition, the implementation of an integrated gate-driver solution could lead to cost reductions when considering the total system cost.
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