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ML4804CP Datasheet(PDF) 7 Page - Fairchild Semiconductor |
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ML4804CP Datasheet(HTML) 7 Page - Fairchild Semiconductor |
7 / 14 page ML4804 REV. 1.0.2 3/9/2001 7 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION The ML4804 consists of an average current controlled, continuous boost Power Factor Corrector (PFC) front end and a synchronized Pulse Width Modulator (PWM) back end. The PWM can be used in either current or voltage mode. In voltage mode, feedforward from the PFC output buss can be used to improve the PWM’s line regulation. In either mode, the PWM stage uses conventional trailing- edge duty cycle modulation, while the PFC uses leading- edge modulation. This patented leading/trailing edge modulation technique results in a higher useable PFC error amplifier bandwidth, and can significantly reduce the size of the PFC DC buss capacitor. The synchronization of the PWM with the PFC simplifies the PWM compensation due to the controlled ripple on the PFC output capacitor (the PWM input capacitor). The PWM section of the ML4804 runs at the same frequency as the PFC. In addition to power factor correction, a number of protection features have been built into the ML4804. These include soft-start, PFC over-voltage protection, peak current limiting, brownout protection, duty cycle limiting, and under-voltage lockout. POWER FACTOR CORRECTION Power factor correction makes a non-linear load look like a resistive load to the AC line. For a resistor, the current drawn from the line is in phase with and proportional to the line voltage, so the power factor is unity (one). A common class of non-linear load is the input of most power supplies, which use a bridge rectifier and capacitive input filter fed from the line. The peak- charging effect, which occurs on the input filter capacitor in these supplies, causes brief high-amplitude pulses of current to flow from the power line, rather than a sinusoidal current in-phase with the line voltage. Such supplies present a power factor to the line of less than one (i.e. they cause significant current harmonics of the power line frequency to appear at their input). If the input current drawn by such a supply (or any other non-linear load) can be made to follow the input voltage in instantaneous amplitude, it will appear resistive to the AC line and a unity power factor will be achieved. To hold the input current draw of a device drawing power from the AC line in phase with and proportional to the input voltage, a way must be found to prevent that device from loading the line except in proportion to the instantaneous line voltage. The PFC section of the ML4804 uses a boost-mode DC-DC converter to accomplish this. The input to the converter is the full wave rectified AC line voltage. No bulk filtering is applied following the bridge rectifier, so the input voltage to the boost converter ranges (at twice line frequency) from zero volts to the peak value of the AC input and back to zero. By forcing the boost converter to meet two simultaneous conditions, it is possible to ensure that the current drawn from the power line is proportional to the input line voltage. One of these conditions is that the output voltage of the boost converter must be set higher than the peak value of the line voltage. A commonly used value is 385VDC, to allow for a high line of 270VACrms. The other condition is that the current drawn from the line at any given instant must be proportional to the line voltage. Establishing a suitable voltage control loop for the converter, which in turn drives a current error amplifier and switching output driver satisfies the first of these requirements. The second requirement is met by using the rectified AC line voltage to modulate the output of the voltage control loop. Such modulation causes the current error amplifier to command a power stage current that varies directly with the input voltage. In order to prevent ripple, which will necessarily appear at the output of the boost circuit (typically about 10VAC on a 385V DC level), from introducing distortion back through the voltage error amplifier, the bandwidth of the voltage loop is deliberately kept low. A final refinement is to adjust the overall gain of the PFC such to be proportional to 1/VIN2, which linearizes the transfer function of the system as the AC input voltage varies. Since the boost converter topology in the ML4804 PFC is of the current-averaging type, no slope compensation is required. PFC SECTION Gain Modulator Figure 1 shows a block diagram of the PFC section of the ML4804. The gain modulator is the heart of the PFC, as it is this circuit block which controls the response of the current loop to line voltage waveform and frequency, rms line voltage, and PFC output voltage. There are three inputs to the gain modulator. These are: 1) A current representing the instantaneous input voltage (amplitude and waveshape) to the PFC. The rectified AC input sine wave is converted to a proportional current via a resistor and is then fed into the gain modulator at IAC. Sampling current in this way minimizes ground noise, as is required in high power switching power conversion environments. The gain modulator responds linearly to this current. 2) A voltage proportional to the long-term RMS AC line voltage, derived from the rectified line voltage after scaling and filtering. This signal is presented to the gain modulator at VRMS. The gain modulator’s output is inversely proportional to VRMS2 (except at unusually low values of VRMS where special gain contouring takes over, to limit power dissipation of the circuit components under heavy brownout conditions). The relationship between VRMS and gain is called K, and is illustrated in the Typical Performance Characteristics. 3) The output of the voltage error amplifier, VEAO. The gain modulator responds linearly to variations in this voltage. |
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