4.8 Article

Push-Pull Class Φ2 RF Power Amplifier

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages 10515-10531

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPEL.2020.2981312

Keywords

Harmonic analysis; power amplifiers; radiofrequency amplifiers; switching converters; soft switching; tuning; zero current switching; zero voltage switching

Funding

  1. Texas Instruments Kilby Labs through the Stanford SystemX Alliance Faculty, Mentor, Advisor Research Program

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The Class Phi(2)/EF2 amplifier is an attractive topology for high-voltage and high-frequency power conversion because of the high efficiency, reduced device voltage stress, simplicity of gate driving, and load-independent ZVS operation. Due to many degrees of freedom for tuning, previous studies can only solve the single-ended Phi(2) circuit using numerical methods. This work focuses on improving the design and operating characteristics of a push-pull Phi(2) amplifier with a T network connected between the switch nodes, or a PPT Phi(2) amplifier. The PPT Phi(2) amplifier has less circulating energy and achieves higher cutoff frequency f(T) than other Phi(2)/EF2 circuits. We, then, present a series-stacked input configuration to reduce the switch voltage stress and improve the efficiency and power density. A compact 6.78-MHz, 100-V, 300-W prototype converter is demonstrated that uses low-cost Si devices and achieves 96% peak total efficiency and maintains above 94.5% drain efficiency across a wide range of voltage and power. Together with the advances in wide-bandgap semiconductors and magnetic materials, the PPT Phi(2) circuit opens more possibilities for the state-of-the-art performance of solid-state RF amplifiers in high-frequency, high-power applications, including wireless charging for electric vehicles, plasma RF drives, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

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