4.8 Article

A Novel High-Current Planar Inductor With Cooling Fins Based on 3-D Printing

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS
Volume 36, Issue 11, Pages 12189-12195

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPEL.2021.3078083

Keywords

3-D printing; cooling fins; high current; planar inductor; selective laser melting (SLM)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51907155]
  2. Power Electronics Science and Education Development Program of Delta Group [DREG2019007]
  3. Research and Development Plan Projects in Key Area of Guangdong Province [2019B090910002]
  4. Civil Aerospace Technology Research Project in Advance [B0202]

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This paper presents a novel high-current planar inductor with cooling fins based on 3D printing technology, which outperforms traditional PCB planar inductors in terms of performance and thermal management, allowing it to operate effectively under 100A current.
This letter proposed a novel high-current planar inductor with cooling fins based on 3-D printing and its copper winding is 3-D printed by using selective laser melting technology. The 3-D-printed winding is designed for high-current applications based on 3-D space and can work as both winding and cooling fins. Compared with conventional printed circuit board (PCB) planar inductor, the proposed planar inductor not only has better performance, such as low dc resistance (DCR), ac resistance, and temperature rise, without volume increasing, but also has the superiorities of conventional PCB planar magnetics, such as ease of manufacture and controllability. To verify its performance, a 100-A-output buck converter using the proposed inductor was fabricated and compared with another identical buck converter using a conventional PCB inductor with the same size. The DCR of the proposed inductor is almost one-fifth of the PCB inductor. Besides, the efficiency of the buck converter with the proposed inductor is always over 0.5% higher than that with PCB inductor under different loads and its maximum efficiency is nearly 1% higher at light load. Furthermore, the maximum temperature rise of the proposed inductor is 26.8 degrees C under full load, only one-third of the PCB planar inductor. In other words, the proposed inductor can work well under 100-A current, whereas the traditional PCB inductor cannot due to too high temperature (103.8 degrees C).

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