4.6 Article

Sliding-Mode Control of a Quadratic Buck Converter With Constant Power Load

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 71837-71852

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3186312

Keywords

Switches; Control systems; Voltage control; Pulse width modulation; Behavioral sciences; Buck converters; Telecommunications; High-order converters with constant power load; buck quadratic converter; sliding-mode control

Funding

  1. Universidad Santo Tomas, Colombia, Proyecto Semillero [2054506]
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [PID2019-111443RB-I00]
  3. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo (ANID) through projects FONDECYT Iniciacion [11220863]
  4. SERC Chile [CONICYT/FONDAP/15110019]

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This paper analyzes the two-loop sliding-mode control of a high-order converter supplying a constant power load for the first time. The addition of an appropriate linear outer loop stabilizes the system and provides output voltage regulation with fast recovery and negligible overshoot. The experimental results are in good agreement with theoretical predictions.
This paper analyzes for the first time a two-loop sliding-mode control (SMC) of a high-order converter supplying a constant power load (CPL). The converter is a single-switch quadratic buck structure (QBC) interfacing a domestic 380 V DC bus to a CPL requiring a regulated voltage of 48 V DC. The converter is unstable in the absence of control and even after the insertion of an inner loop based on SMC of the input inductor current. The addition of an appropriate linear outer loop establishing the reference to the inner loop stabilizes the system and provides output voltage regulation. The regulated QBC shows a fast recovery of the output voltage with negligible overshoot in response to step-type changes of the output power or the input voltage. It is also shown that the implemented regulator for CPL supply can be used directly in the case of a constant current load (CCL) or a constant resistance load (CRL) resulting in similar performance to the CPL case. PSIM simulations and experimental results in a 400 W prototype are in good agreement with theoretical predictions.

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