Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
The aim of this article is to present the current status, challenges and opportunities in the field of electrical energy conversion at very high operating frequencies (Very High Frequency : 30 - 300 MHz). This area of research has been emerging internationally since the 2010s, in a context of massive electrification of systems, driving the design of high-power density, high-efficiency electronic converters. In this article, we describe the objectives of power electronics at VHF frequencies, discuss the challenges and state of the art of research in the field, and outline the outlook for the future.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Loris PACE: Senior Lecturer, EEA Department, École Centrale de Lyon - Ampère Laboratory, École Centrale de Lyon, Écully, France
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Baptiste DAIRE: Doctoral student in Electrical Engineering, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 - Ampère Laboratory, Univ. Lyon, Villeurbanne, France
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Matthieu BELEY: Doctoral student in Electrical Engineering, École Centrale de Lyon - Ampère Laboratory, École Centrale de Lyon, Écully, France
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Florentin SALOMEZ: Postdoctoral Researcher in Electrical Engineering - G2Elab Laboratory, Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble INP, Grenoble, France
INTRODUCTION
Electrical energy conversion systems are constantly improving, in line with the advances made by research in response to societal, industrial and/or military needs. Major breakthroughs have enabled the mass production of power converters capable of converting electricity from a variety of sources, over wide voltage/power/frequency ranges, to loads as diverse as each other. These include the invention of mercury vapor rectifiers at the beginning of the 20th century, the development of the bipolar transistor in the 1940s, the massive spread of MOSFETs (Metal Oxyde Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors) in the 1970s, and IGBTs (Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistors) in the 1990s, to name but a few notable examples.
Since the 1970s and the rise of power electronics, increasing power density and improving energy efficiency have been major areas of research in this field. This demand is all the more prevalent in today's context of massive electrification of energy systems (transport, machines, utilities, etc.).
A natural way to reduce the footprint of passive components within the converter is to increase the switching frequency, thereby reducing the amount of reactive energy to be stored during an operating cycle. Technological advances in power semiconductor components and the emergence of large-gap semiconductors now enable traditional high-efficiency power conversion applications at frequencies of up to a few MHz. However, a number of bottlenecks linked to conventional converter topologies and the component technologies used, which we will discuss, are holding back substantial gains in power density beyond these frequencies.
Could very-high-frequency power conversion be the start of a major new breakthrough in terms of integration and sustainability? At the frontier between power electronics and radio frequencies, it proposes to operate at very high switching frequencies (the 30-300 MHz frequency band), combining resonant topologies and adapted components. This is an emerging field, and there are many issues at stake. This article summarizes the issues and advances in the field, as well as the outlook for the future.
At the end of the article, readers will find a glossary and table of symbols and acronyms.
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KEYWORDS
power electronics | Very High Frequency | power density | DC/DC conversion
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DC-DC conversion at VHF frequencies
Bibliography
- (1) - KOLAR (J.W.), DROFENIK (U.), BIELA (J.), HELDWEIN (M.L.), ERTL (H.), FRIEDLI (T.), ROUND (S.D.) - PWM Converter Power Density Barriers – In 2007 Power Conversion Conference – Nagoya, In 2007 Power Conversion Conference. - Nagoya. p. P-9-P-29 – 10.1109/PCCON.2007.372914 p. P-9-P-29 (2007).
- (2)...
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