US20170028855A1 - Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device - Google Patents
Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device Download PDFInfo
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- US20170028855A1 US20170028855A1 US15/222,662 US201615222662A US2017028855A1 US 20170028855 A1 US20170028855 A1 US 20170028855A1 US 201615222662 A US201615222662 A US 201615222662A US 2017028855 A1 US2017028855 A1 US 2017028855A1
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- B60L11/182—
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- B60L11/1812—
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- B60L11/1814—
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60L—PROPULSION OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; SUPPLYING ELECTRIC POWER FOR AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRODYNAMIC BRAKE SYSTEMS FOR VEHICLES IN GENERAL; MAGNETIC SUSPENSION OR LEVITATION FOR VEHICLES; MONITORING OPERATING VARIABLES OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRIC SAFETY DEVICES FOR ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES
- B60L3/00—Electric devices on electrically-propelled vehicles for safety purposes; Monitoring operating variables, e.g. speed, deceleration or energy consumption
- B60L3/0092—Electric devices on electrically-propelled vehicles for safety purposes; Monitoring operating variables, e.g. speed, deceleration or energy consumption with use of redundant elements for safety purposes
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60L—PROPULSION OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; SUPPLYING ELECTRIC POWER FOR AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRODYNAMIC BRAKE SYSTEMS FOR VEHICLES IN GENERAL; MAGNETIC SUSPENSION OR LEVITATION FOR VEHICLES; MONITORING OPERATING VARIABLES OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRIC SAFETY DEVICES FOR ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES
- B60L53/00—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles
- B60L53/10—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles characterised by the energy transfer between the charging station and the vehicle
- B60L53/12—Inductive energy transfer
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60L—PROPULSION OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; SUPPLYING ELECTRIC POWER FOR AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRODYNAMIC BRAKE SYSTEMS FOR VEHICLES IN GENERAL; MAGNETIC SUSPENSION OR LEVITATION FOR VEHICLES; MONITORING OPERATING VARIABLES OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRIC SAFETY DEVICES FOR ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES
- B60L53/00—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles
- B60L53/20—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles characterised by converters located in the vehicle
- B60L53/22—Constructional details or arrangements of charging converters specially adapted for charging electric vehicles
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60L—PROPULSION OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; SUPPLYING ELECTRIC POWER FOR AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRODYNAMIC BRAKE SYSTEMS FOR VEHICLES IN GENERAL; MAGNETIC SUSPENSION OR LEVITATION FOR VEHICLES; MONITORING OPERATING VARIABLES OF ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES; ELECTRIC SAFETY DEVICES FOR ELECTRICALLY-PROPELLED VEHICLES
- B60L53/00—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles
- B60L53/20—Methods of charging batteries, specially adapted for electric vehicles; Charging stations or on-board charging equipment therefor; Exchange of energy storage elements in electric vehicles characterised by converters located in the vehicle
- B60L53/24—Using the vehicle's propulsion converter for charging
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02J—CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS OR SYSTEMS FOR SUPPLYING OR DISTRIBUTING ELECTRIC POWER; SYSTEMS FOR STORING ELECTRIC ENERGY
- H02J7/00—Circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries
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- H02J7/0052—
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02J—CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS OR SYSTEMS FOR SUPPLYING OR DISTRIBUTING ELECTRIC POWER; SYSTEMS FOR STORING ELECTRIC ENERGY
- H02J7/00—Circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries
- H02J7/02—Circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries for charging batteries from ac mains by converters
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02M—APPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
- H02M1/00—Details of apparatus for conversion
- H02M1/42—Circuits or arrangements for compensating for or adjusting power factor in converters or inverters
- H02M1/4208—Arrangements for improving power factor of AC input
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60Y—INDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO ASPECTS CROSS-CUTTING VEHICLE TECHNOLOGY
- B60Y2200/00—Type of vehicle
- B60Y2200/90—Vehicles comprising electric prime movers
- B60Y2200/91—Electric vehicles
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02J—CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS OR SYSTEMS FOR SUPPLYING OR DISTRIBUTING ELECTRIC POWER; SYSTEMS FOR STORING ELECTRIC ENERGY
- H02J2207/00—Indexing scheme relating to details of circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries
- H02J2207/20—Charging or discharging characterised by the power electronics converter
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02M—APPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
- H02M1/00—Details of apparatus for conversion
- H02M1/0067—Converter structures employing plural converter units, other than for parallel operation of the units on a single load
- H02M1/007—Plural converter units in cascade
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T10/00—Road transport of goods or passengers
- Y02T10/60—Other road transportation technologies with climate change mitigation effect
- Y02T10/70—Energy storage systems for electromobility, e.g. batteries
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T10/00—Road transport of goods or passengers
- Y02T10/60—Other road transportation technologies with climate change mitigation effect
- Y02T10/7072—Electromobility specific charging systems or methods for batteries, ultracapacitors, supercapacitors or double-layer capacitors
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T10/00—Road transport of goods or passengers
- Y02T10/80—Technologies aiming to reduce greenhouse gasses emissions common to all road transportation technologies
- Y02T10/92—Energy efficient charging or discharging systems for batteries, ultracapacitors, supercapacitors or double-layer capacitors specially adapted for vehicles
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T90/00—Enabling technologies or technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
- Y02T90/10—Technologies relating to charging of electric vehicles
- Y02T90/12—Electric charging stations
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02T—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
- Y02T90/00—Enabling technologies or technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
- Y02T90/10—Technologies relating to charging of electric vehicles
- Y02T90/14—Plug-in electric vehicles
Definitions
- the invention relates to a high-voltage battery charging device, in particular for an electric-traction motor vehicle, on the basis of a single-phase power supply network.
- the electrical power from the network is delivered to the battery successively via two converters: a voltage step-down or “buck” converter and a voltage step-up or “boost” converter.
- buck voltage step-down
- boost voltage step-up
- These two converters enable the voltage ratio between the output and input terminals thereof to be decreased or increased by successively opening and closing a series of switches, at a frequency controlled as a function of the output current and/or the desired output voltage.
- Such recharging systems are for example described in patent application FR 2 943 188, which relates to an on-board recharging system for motor vehicles enabling a battery of the vehicle to be recharged from a three-phase or single-phase circuit, the recharging circuit incorporating the coils of an electric machine that also provides other functions such as current generation or vehicle propulsion.
- the chopping of the current drawn from the power supply network induces high-frequency components in the current drawn, i.e. harmonics of an order higher than the fundamental frequency of the distribution network, which is conventionally 50 Hz.
- such a recharge system also includes a resistive/inductive/capacitive (RLC) filter at the input of the voltage step-down converter.
- This filter induces a phase shift between the current and the voltage drawn from the network. This phase shift results in a reactive power flowing through the network that is not drawn by the user and that should ideally be minimized.
- domestic power supply networks are single-phase power supply networks.
- a vehicle including a device for recharging a battery from a single-phase power supply can therefore be recharged from a domestic power supply network, for example in a private parking spot or garage.
- Recharging from a single-phase power supply network has some specific features. Depending on the topology thereof, it is not always possible to bring the input current into phase with the network voltage. Moreover, when the input sinusoidal voltage is close to zero, the system becomes momentarily uncontrollable, which is not very inconvenient if the storage inductance of the electric machine between the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter is high, because the current in the inductor does not have time to drop, but has the drawback of this inductor being voluminous.
- the aim of the invention is to propose a device for controlling the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter of such a recharging device that enables a reduced phase angle to be maintained between the current and the voltage drawn from the single-phase power supply network, despite the presence of an RLC filter at the device input.
- Another aim of the invention is to propose an on-board recharging device for a motor vehicle that can be connected to an external single-phase power supply network and that incorporates the winding of an electric machine of the vehicle in the circuit thereof.
- one embodiment proposes a device for charging a battery, in particular a battery of an electric-traction motor vehicle, from a single-phase power supply network, comprising a filtering stage intended to be connected to the single-phase network, a voltage step-down stage connected to the filtering stage, a voltage step-up stage intended to be connected to the battery and coupled to the voltage step-down stage via an inductive component such as an inductance coil, a control unit able to impose chopping duty cycles on the voltage step-down stage and the voltage step-up stage.
- control unit includes means for compensating for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage.
- control unit includes a first open-loop control module able to determine a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the voltage of the single-phase power supply network, a setpoint power, and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, to compensate for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage, and to control the power received by the battery as a function of the setpoint power.
- the first control module may advantageously include a map providing the amplitude of the input current of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the amplitude of the input voltage and of the setpoint power.
- control unit includes a second control module able to determine a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-up stage as a function of the voltage at the output of the voltage step-down stage, the voltage of the battery, and the difference between the setpoint induction intensity and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, providing closed-loop control of the intensity of the current flowing through the battery.
- the setpoint induction intensity is preferably always greater than the intensity flowing through the battery, and the intensity flowing through the inductance coil.
- the second control module includes a proportional-integral controller to which is sent the difference between the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil and the setpoint inductance intensity, and overspeed protection means designed to deactivate the integral part of the controller if the chopping duty cycle determined by the second module is approximately equal to “0” or “1”.
- the invention proposes a motor vehicle with at least partial electrical traction including an electric machine coupled to the drive wheels and an inverter stage able to power the electric machine.
- said vehicle includes a device for charging a battery from a single-phase network as described above, the electrical connections and a switch of the voltage step-up stage of said device being included in the inverter stage, and the inductance coil of said device corresponding to the windings of said electric machine.
- one embodiment proposes a method for controlling the charging of a battery, in particular a battery of a motor vehicle, from a single-phase network, in which the input voltage is filtered, the electrical power is taken from the network to the battery via a voltage step-down stage and a voltage step-up stage coupled via an inductive component such as an inductance coil.
- the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage is compensated.
- the input current of the voltage step-down stage is controlled by means of the open-loop control of a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the voltage of the single-phase power supply network, a setpoint power, and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, to compensate for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage, and to control the power received by the battery as a function of the setpoint power.
- the intensity of the current flowing through the battery can also be set to a reference battery intensity by setting, in a closed loop, a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-up stage as a function of the voltage at the output of the voltage step-down stage, the voltage of the battery, and the difference between the setpoint induction intensity and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil.
- the integral part of a proportional-integral controller can advantageously be deactivated if the chopping duty cycle is approximately equal to “0” or “1”.
- FIG. 1 shows a recharging device according to an embodiment of the invention
- FIGS. 2 a and 2 b show respectively first and second embodiments of a first control module
- FIG. 3 is a schematic view of an embodiment of a second control module
- FIG. 4 is a graphical representation of the current flowing through the inductance coil.
- FIG. 1 shows a schematic view of a device for charging a battery of an electric-traction motor vehicle from a single-phase power supply network, according to one embodiment.
- the recharging device 1 includes a filtering stage 2 , a voltage step-down stage 3 coupled to the filtering stage 2 , and a voltage step-up stage 4 coupled to the voltage step-down stage 3 via an electric machine 5 .
- the device 1 can be coupled to a three-phase or single-phase power supply, it has three terminals B 1 B 2 , B 3 coupled to the input of the filtering stage 2 , and that can be coupled to a power supply network. In single-phase recharging, only the inputs B 1 and B 2 are coupled to a single-phase power supply network delivering an input voltage Ve and an input current Ie.
- Each input terminal B 1 , B 2 and B 3 is coupled to a filtering branch of the filtering stage 2 .
- Each filtering branch includes two branches in parallel, one having an inductor of value L 2 and the other having an inductor of value L 1 and a resistor of value R in series.
- the outputs of these two filtering branches are each coupled to a capacitor of capacitance C also coupled to ground, at a point respectively named D 1 , D 2 , D 3 for each of the filtering branches.
- the set of resistors of value R, inductors of value L 1 or L 2 , and capacitors of capacitance C form an RLC filter at the input of the voltage step-down converter 3 .
- terminal B 3 is not coupled to the power supply network. Since the filtering branch coupled to terminal B 3 is not used, it is not taken into account in the remainder of the description and is shown using dotted lines. The other elements of the electrical circuit shown using dotted lines are elements that are only used when coupling to a three-phase power supply network.
- the voltage step-down stage 3 is coupled to the filtering stage 2 at points D 1 and D 2 .
- the voltage step-down converter 3 includes two parallel branches 6 and 7 , each having two switches S 1 or S 2 controlled by a control unit 15 .
- Each input D 1 or D 2 of the voltage step-down converter is connected, respectively by a branch F 1 and F 2 to a connection point located between two switches S 1 or S 2 of a single branch 6 and 7 , respectively.
- the common extremities of the branches 6 and 7 form two output terminals of the voltage step-down converter 3 .
- One of the terminals is linked to the “ ⁇ ” terminal of the battery 13 and to a first input 10 of a voltage step-up converter 4 .
- the other of these terminals is connected to a first terminal of an electric machine 5 , the other terminal of which is connected to a second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4 .
- the voltage step-up converter 4 has two switches S 4 and S 5 that can be controlled by the control unit 15 independently. These two switches S 4 and S 5 are located on a branch connecting the first input 10 of the voltage step-up converter 4 and the “+” terminal of the battery 13 .
- the second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4 to which the electric machine 5 is connected, is connected between the two switches S 4 and S 5 , the switch S 4 being connected between the second input 11 and the “+” terminal of the battery 143 , and the switch S 5 being coupled between the first input 10 and the second input 11 .
- An electric machine 5 similar to a resistor of value Rd placed in series with an inductance coil Ld, is connected between the output terminal of the voltage step-down converter 3 and the second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4 .
- the electric machine 5 may be replaced by a non-resistive inductance coil or a supplementary inductance coil may be connected in series with the electric machine 5 without moving outside the scope of the invention.
- the terminals of the battery 13 are connected to a capacitor 12 intended to keep the voltage at the terminals of the battery 13 relatively stable, and a module 19 for monitoring the charge of the battery that is able to deliver a setpoint value I bat ref determining, as a function of the battery charge level, the optimal current intensity to inject via the “+” terminal of the battery 13 .
- the charge monitoring module 19 sends the setpoint value I bat ref to the control unit 15 over a dedicated connection.
- Measurement means built into the module 19 or otherwise, also send the control unit 15 a value I bat determining a measured current actually entering the battery, and a value V bat determining the voltage between the “ ⁇ ” terminal and the “+” terminal of the battery 13 .
- the control unit 15 includes a first control module 16 determining the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down stage 3 , and a second control module 17 determining a chopping duty cycle setpoint a s of the voltage step-up stage 4 .
- control unit 15 includes two pilot modules (not shown), the first to impose a temporal opening and closing pattern for each of the switches of the voltage step-down converter 3 such as to obtain the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down stage 3 , and the second to impose a temporal opening and closing pattern for each of the switches S 4 and S 5 of the voltage step-up converter 4 such as to obtain the duty cycle a s .
- the switches are preferably transistors enabling rapid switching, for example insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBT).
- IGBT insulated gate bipolar transistors
- the switch S 4 between the second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4 and the “+” terminal of the battery 13 is always closed and may as a result be replaced by a diode enabling a flow from said second input 11 to the “+” terminal of the battery 13 .
- a diode can be connected in parallel with the switch S 4 coupled between said second input 11 and the “+” terminal of the battery 13 , the diode enabling a flow from said second input 11 to the “+” terminal of the battery 13 .
- the control unit 15 receives as input the values of the power supply voltage Ve from the network, the intensity Id of the current flowing through the electric machine 5 , the voltage V bat across the battery 13 , the intensity I bat of the current flowing through the battery 13 , and the reference battery intensity I bat ref delivered by the charge monitoring module 19 .
- the characteristic values of the electrical elements of the charging device 1 are within the following ranges:
- the control unit prepares chopping duty cycle setpoint values a and a s for the voltage step-down converter 3 and for the voltage step-up converter 4 , satisfying the following three objectives:
- the voltage Vc at the input of the voltage step-down stage 3 is deemed to be equal to the input voltage Ve of the power supply network.
- the output voltage Vkn of the voltage step-down stage 3 is a ⁇ Ve.
- the equation of the branch bearing the electric machine 5 can be written in the following form:
- a is the chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down stage 3
- a s the duty cycle of the voltage step-up stage 4 .
- the intensity If of the input current of the voltage step-down stage 3 can therefore be used as a control variable to lock the current Id flowing through the electric machine 5 to a setpoint value Id ref prepared such as to prevent the elimination of the current in the inductance coil Ld.
- the system becomes uncontrollable, even if it is locked. According to the equations, during these uncontrollable phases, the current Id in the coil Ld of the electric machine 5 can only drop, as shown in FIG. 4 .
- Controlling the voltage step-down stage 3 using the chopping duty cycle setpoint a makes it possible to lock the power supply current Ie of the network to a zero reference, in order to eliminate the phase shift between the current and the voltage at the input of the voltage step-down stage 3 , and to lock the current Id flowing through the electric machine 5 to the desired setpoint value, i.e. the setpoint induction intensity Id ref .
- the command guarantees that If is in phase with the input voltage.
- the third objective of the control provided by the control unit 15 relating to locking the input current in the battery I bat to the setpoint value I bat ref delivered by the charge monitoring module 19 remains to be fulfilled.
- the relationship determining the dynamic of the current through the electric machine 5 directly links the duty cycle a s of the voltage step-up stage 4 and the current Id flowing through the electric machine 5 .
- FIG. 2 a is a schematic view of a first embodiment of the first control module 16 .
- the first control module includes open-loop control of the input current If of the voltage step-down stage 3 .
- the input current If of the voltage step-down stage 3 is controlled by calculating the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down converter 3 .
- the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down stage 3 is determined as a function of the setpoint power P bat ref , determined from the voltage of the battery V bat and the setpoint battery intensity I batt ref , the input voltage Ve of the single-phase power supply network and the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld.
- the first control module 16 receives the battery intensity setpoint I bat ref at a first input and the voltage measured at the terminals of the battery V bat at a second input.
- the setpoint intensity of the battery T bat ref and the voltage V bat of the battery are inputted to a first multiplier 21 which then outputs the setpoint power P bat ref .
- the control module 16 receives the input voltage Ve from the power supply network.
- the module 16 includes a signal analyzer 22 enabling the standardized amplitude signal V m proportional to the input voltage Ve of the single-phase power supply network to be extracted.
- the amplitude signal V m is delivered to a first reversing switch 23 that outputs the reverse of the amplitude V m .
- the reverse V m of this amplitude is delivered to a second multiplier 24 that also receives as an input the setpoint power P bat ref .
- the second multiplier 24 then outputs the amplitude If m of the input current of the voltage step-down stage 3 to a third multiplier 25 , which also receives as an input the phase signal sin( ⁇ t) of the input voltage V e of the single-phase power supply network.
- the third multiplier 25 then outputs the input current If of the output voltage step-down stage 3 , firstly to the second control module 17 and secondly to a fourth multiplier 26 .
- the module 16 receives, via a fourth input, the value Id of the intensity of the current flowing through the coil Ld of the electric machine 5 .
- the value Id of the current flowing through the coil Ld is delivered to a second reversing switch 27 that outputs the reverse of the intensity Id of the current flowing through the coil Ld to the fourth multiplier 26 .
- the fourth multiplier 26 then performs the calculation If/Id and outputs the value of the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down stage 3 , enabling the input current If of the voltage step-down stage 3 to be controlled.
- FIG. 2 b shows a second embodiment of the first control module 16 .
- the second multiplier 24 has been replaced by a map 28 delivering the amplitude If m of the input current If of the voltage step-down stage 3 as a function of the amplitude V , of the input voltage Ve and of the setpoint power P bat ref .
- FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of the second control module 17 .
- ⁇ is a setting parameter
- the second control module 17 includes closed-loop control of the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld of the electric machine 5 .
- the second control module 17 receives, at a first input, a value Ie of the input intensity of the power supply network. This intensity value Ie is delivered to a module 31 determining the value of the setpoint induction intensity Id ref .
- the second control module 17 receives, at a second input, the value Id of the intensity of the current flowing through the coil Ld of the electric machine 5 .
- the value Id of the intensity is delivered to a negative input of a first subtracter 32 that receives at a positive input the value Id ref of the setpoint induction intensity.
- the first subtracter 32 then outputs the difference between the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld and the setpoint inductance intensity I d ref to a proportional/integral controller 30 .
- the proportional/integral controller 30 includes two branches in parallel, the first of which includes a proportional control module K p and the second includes an integral control module K i and an integration module i.
- the second control module 17 receives, at a third input, the value If of the intensity of the input current of the voltage step-down stage 3 delivered by the first control module 16 .
- the intensity If is delivered to a first multiplier 33 , which also receives as input the input voltage V e of the single-phase network received at a fourth input of the second control module 17 .
- the first multiplier 33 thus outputs a value P active of the active power.
- This value P active is inputted to a second multiplier 34 that also receives as input the reverse of the current Id, the current Id having previously been delivered to a first reversing switch 35 .
- the second multiplier 34 performs the calculation P active / Id and outputs a value Vkn of the output voltage of the voltage step-down stage 3 .
- the voltage Vkn of the voltage step-down stage 3 is delivered to a positive input of a second subtracter 36 that receives on a negative input the output from the proportional/integral controller 30 .
- the second subtracter 36 then outputs the sum of the difference between the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld and the setpoint inductance intensity I d ref corrected by the proportional/integral controller 30 , with the output voltage Vkn of the voltage step-down stage 3 at the input of a third multiplier 37 .
- the third multiplier 37 also receives as input the reverse of the battery voltage V bat , the battery voltage V bat having been received at a fifth input of the second control module and delivered in advance to a second reversing switch 38 .
- the third multiplier 37 then outputs the setpoint value of the chopping duty cycle a s of the voltage step-up stage 4 .
- the second control module 17 also includes a feedback loop between the output of the third multiplier 37 and the input of the branch of the proportional/integral controller 30 containing the integral control module K.
- the integral control branch is deactivated.
- This feedback loop is an overspeed protection technique used to overcome the loss of control of the device when the input voltage Ve approaches zero. Indeed during uncontrollable phases, control is saturated, i.e. the duty cycles of the switches, or IGBT transistors, are at 1, as it is not able to reduce the difference. To prevent this error from continuing to be integrated, the feedback loop is used. Accordingly, once the device can be controlled, the current Id flowing through the coil Ld of the electric machine 5 is brought to the reference value Id ref .
- this feedback loop also makes it possible to control a system that has a very-low-inductance coil Ld.
- the use of a low-inductance coil makes it possible to reduce the volume of the charger.
- the invention provides an on-board charging device for a motor vehicle designed to be connected to an external single-phase power supply network, incorporating within its circuit the winding of an electric machine of the vehicle, and making it possible to control the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter such as to maintain a reduced phase shift between the current and the voltage drawn from the single-phase power supply network.
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Abstract
A device for charging a battery, in particular a battery of an electric traction motor vehicle, on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, including a filtering stage intended to be connected to the single-phase network, a voltage step-down stage connected to the filtering stage, a voltage step-up stage intended to be connected to the battery and coupled to the voltage step-down stage via an inductive component such as an induction coil, a regulating unit able to impose chopping duty ratios on the voltage step-down stage and on the voltage step-up stage. The regulating unit includes means for compensating for the phase shift between the imput current of the voltage step-down stage and the imput voltage of the voltage step-down stage.
Description
- This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 14/111,925 filed Mar. 25, 2014, which is incorporated herein by reference and which is a National Phase of PCT/FR2012/50806, filed Apr. 12, 2012, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119 from French Application No. 11 01177 filed Apr. 14, 2011.
- Field of the Invention
- The invention relates to a high-voltage battery charging device, in particular for an electric-traction motor vehicle, on the basis of a single-phase power supply network.
- In high-voltage battery recharging systems, the electrical power from the network is delivered to the battery successively via two converters: a voltage step-down or “buck” converter and a voltage step-up or “boost” converter. These two converters enable the voltage ratio between the output and input terminals thereof to be decreased or increased by successively opening and closing a series of switches, at a frequency controlled as a function of the output current and/or the desired output voltage.
- Description of the Related Art
- Such recharging systems are for example described in
patent application FR 2 943 188, which relates to an on-board recharging system for motor vehicles enabling a battery of the vehicle to be recharged from a three-phase or single-phase circuit, the recharging circuit incorporating the coils of an electric machine that also provides other functions such as current generation or vehicle propulsion. - The chopping of the current drawn from the power supply network induces high-frequency components in the current drawn, i.e. harmonics of an order higher than the fundamental frequency of the distribution network, which is conventionally 50 Hz.
- As the electricity distributor imposes a standard concerning the harmonics of the current drawn, such a recharge system also includes a resistive/inductive/capacitive (RLC) filter at the input of the voltage step-down converter. This filter induces a phase shift between the current and the voltage drawn from the network. This phase shift results in a reactive power flowing through the network that is not drawn by the user and that should ideally be minimized.
- Furthermore, most domestic power supply networks are single-phase power supply networks. A vehicle including a device for recharging a battery from a single-phase power supply can therefore be recharged from a domestic power supply network, for example in a private parking spot or garage.
- Recharging from a single-phase power supply network has some specific features. Depending on the topology thereof, it is not always possible to bring the input current into phase with the network voltage. Moreover, when the input sinusoidal voltage is close to zero, the system becomes momentarily uncontrollable, which is not very inconvenient if the storage inductance of the electric machine between the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter is high, because the current in the inductor does not have time to drop, but has the drawback of this inductor being voluminous.
- Furthermore, for the power flow to be continuous, a non-zero current needs to be flowing through the storage inductor of the electric machine between the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter.
- The aim of the invention is to propose a device for controlling the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter of such a recharging device that enables a reduced phase angle to be maintained between the current and the voltage drawn from the single-phase power supply network, despite the presence of an RLC filter at the device input.
- Another aim of the invention is to propose an on-board recharging device for a motor vehicle that can be connected to an external single-phase power supply network and that incorporates the winding of an electric machine of the vehicle in the circuit thereof.
- According to one aspect, one embodiment proposes a device for charging a battery, in particular a battery of an electric-traction motor vehicle, from a single-phase power supply network, comprising a filtering stage intended to be connected to the single-phase network, a voltage step-down stage connected to the filtering stage, a voltage step-up stage intended to be connected to the battery and coupled to the voltage step-down stage via an inductive component such as an inductance coil, a control unit able to impose chopping duty cycles on the voltage step-down stage and the voltage step-up stage.
- According to a general feature, the control unit includes means for compensating for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage.
- Advantageously, the control unit includes a first open-loop control module able to determine a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the voltage of the single-phase power supply network, a setpoint power, and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, to compensate for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage, and to control the power received by the battery as a function of the setpoint power.
- The first control module may advantageously include a map providing the amplitude of the input current of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the amplitude of the input voltage and of the setpoint power.
- Preferably, the control unit includes a second control module able to determine a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-up stage as a function of the voltage at the output of the voltage step-down stage, the voltage of the battery, and the difference between the setpoint induction intensity and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, providing closed-loop control of the intensity of the current flowing through the battery.
- The setpoint induction intensity is preferably always greater than the intensity flowing through the battery, and the intensity flowing through the inductance coil.
- Advantageously, the second control module includes a proportional-integral controller to which is sent the difference between the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil and the setpoint inductance intensity, and overspeed protection means designed to deactivate the integral part of the controller if the chopping duty cycle determined by the second module is approximately equal to “0” or “1”.
- According to another aspect, the invention proposes a motor vehicle with at least partial electrical traction including an electric machine coupled to the drive wheels and an inverter stage able to power the electric machine.
- According to a general feature, said vehicle includes a device for charging a battery from a single-phase network as described above, the electrical connections and a switch of the voltage step-up stage of said device being included in the inverter stage, and the inductance coil of said device corresponding to the windings of said electric machine.
- According to another aspect, one embodiment proposes a method for controlling the charging of a battery, in particular a battery of a motor vehicle, from a single-phase network, in which the input voltage is filtered, the electrical power is taken from the network to the battery via a voltage step-down stage and a voltage step-up stage coupled via an inductive component such as an inductance coil.
- According to a general feature, the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage is compensated.
- Preferably, the input current of the voltage step-down stage is controlled by means of the open-loop control of a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down stage as a function of the voltage of the single-phase power supply network, a setpoint power, and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil, to compensate for the phase shift between the input current of the voltage step-down stage and the input voltage of the voltage step-down stage, and to control the power received by the battery as a function of the setpoint power.
- The intensity of the current flowing through the battery can also be set to a reference battery intensity by setting, in a closed loop, a chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-up stage as a function of the voltage at the output of the voltage step-down stage, the voltage of the battery, and the difference between the setpoint induction intensity and the intensity of the current flowing through the inductance coil.
- The integral part of a proportional-integral controller can advantageously be deactivated if the chopping duty cycle is approximately equal to “0” or “1”.
- Other advantages and features of the invention are set out in the detailed description of an embodiment of the invention, which is in no way limiting, and the attached drawings, in which:
-
FIG. 1 shows a recharging device according to an embodiment of the invention; -
FIGS. 2a and 2b show respectively first and second embodiments of a first control module; -
FIG. 3 is a schematic view of an embodiment of a second control module; -
FIG. 4 is a graphical representation of the current flowing through the inductance coil. -
FIG. 1 shows a schematic view of a device for charging a battery of an electric-traction motor vehicle from a single-phase power supply network, according to one embodiment. - The
recharging device 1 includes afiltering stage 2, a voltage step-downstage 3 coupled to thefiltering stage 2, and a voltage step-upstage 4 coupled to the voltage step-downstage 3 via anelectric machine 5. - Since the
device 1 can be coupled to a three-phase or single-phase power supply, it has three terminals B1 B2, B3 coupled to the input of thefiltering stage 2, and that can be coupled to a power supply network. In single-phase recharging, only the inputs B1 and B2 are coupled to a single-phase power supply network delivering an input voltage Ve and an input current Ie. - Each input terminal B1, B2 and B3 is coupled to a filtering branch of the
filtering stage 2. Each filtering branch includes two branches in parallel, one having an inductor of value L2 and the other having an inductor of value L1 and a resistor of value R in series. - The outputs of these two filtering branches are each coupled to a capacitor of capacitance C also coupled to ground, at a point respectively named D1, D2, D3 for each of the filtering branches. The set of resistors of value R, inductors of value L1 or L2, and capacitors of capacitance C form an RLC filter at the input of the voltage step-
down converter 3. - In single phase recharging, terminal B3 is not coupled to the power supply network. Since the filtering branch coupled to terminal B3 is not used, it is not taken into account in the remainder of the description and is shown using dotted lines. The other elements of the electrical circuit shown using dotted lines are elements that are only used when coupling to a three-phase power supply network.
- The voltage step-down
stage 3 is coupled to thefiltering stage 2 at points D1 and D2. When operating with a single-phase power supply, the voltage step-down converter 3 includes two parallel branches 6 and 7, each having two switches S1 or S2 controlled by acontrol unit 15. - Each input D1 or D2 of the voltage step-down converter is connected, respectively by a branch F1 and F2 to a connection point located between two switches S1 or S2 of a single branch 6 and 7, respectively.
- The common extremities of the branches 6 and 7 form two output terminals of the voltage step-
down converter 3. One of the terminals is linked to the “−” terminal of thebattery 13 and to afirst input 10 of a voltage step-up converter 4. The other of these terminals is connected to a first terminal of anelectric machine 5, the other terminal of which is connected to a second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4. - The voltage step-
up converter 4 has two switches S4 and S5 that can be controlled by thecontrol unit 15 independently. These two switches S4 and S5 are located on a branch connecting thefirst input 10 of the voltage step-up converter 4 and the “+” terminal of thebattery 13. The second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4, to which theelectric machine 5 is connected, is connected between the two switches S4 and S5, the switch S4 being connected between the second input 11 and the “+” terminal of the battery 143, and the switch S5 being coupled between thefirst input 10 and the second input 11. - An
electric machine 5, similar to a resistor of value Rd placed in series with an inductance coil Ld, is connected between the output terminal of the voltage step-down converter 3 and the second input 11 of the voltage step-up converter 4. Theelectric machine 5 may be replaced by a non-resistive inductance coil or a supplementary inductance coil may be connected in series with theelectric machine 5 without moving outside the scope of the invention. - The terminals of the
battery 13 are connected to acapacitor 12 intended to keep the voltage at the terminals of thebattery 13 relatively stable, and amodule 19 for monitoring the charge of the battery that is able to deliver a setpoint value Ibat ref determining, as a function of the battery charge level, the optimal current intensity to inject via the “+” terminal of thebattery 13. Thecharge monitoring module 19 sends the setpoint value Ibat ref to thecontrol unit 15 over a dedicated connection. - Measurement means, built into the
module 19 or otherwise, also send the control unit 15 a value Ibat determining a measured current actually entering the battery, and a value Vbat determining the voltage between the “−” terminal and the “+” terminal of thebattery 13. - Other current intensity measurement modules make it possible to measure and send to the
control unit 15 the value Id of the current flowing through theelectric machine 5, the intensity Ie of the current of the power supply network entering thefiltering stage 2, and the input voltage value Ve of the power supply from the network. - The
control unit 15 includes afirst control module 16 determining the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-downstage 3, and asecond control module 17 determining a chopping duty cycle setpoint as of the voltage step-upstage 4. - For this, the
control unit 15 includes two pilot modules (not shown), the first to impose a temporal opening and closing pattern for each of the switches of the voltage step-downconverter 3 such as to obtain the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-downstage 3, and the second to impose a temporal opening and closing pattern for each of the switches S4 and S5 of the voltage step-upconverter 4 such as to obtain the duty cycle as. - The switches are preferably transistors enabling rapid switching, for example insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBT).
- When used exclusively in single-phase mode, the switch S4 between the second input 11 of the voltage step-up
converter 4 and the “+” terminal of thebattery 13 is always closed and may as a result be replaced by a diode enabling a flow from said second input 11 to the “+” terminal of thebattery 13. If thedevice 1 can be coupled to a single-phase power supply network as well as a three-phase power supply network, a diode can be connected in parallel with the switch S4 coupled between said second input 11 and the “+” terminal of thebattery 13, the diode enabling a flow from said second input 11 to the “+” terminal of thebattery 13. - To assess the duty cycles a and as, the
control unit 15 receives as input the values of the power supply voltage Ve from the network, the intensity Id of the current flowing through theelectric machine 5, the voltage Vbat across thebattery 13, the intensity Ibat of the current flowing through thebattery 13, and the reference battery intensity Ibat ref delivered by thecharge monitoring module 19. - By way of example, the characteristic values of the electrical elements of the
charging device 1 are within the following ranges: -
- the capacitance values of the
filter 2 represent several hundred pF, for example between 100 and 500 μF each, - the
capacitance 12 between the terminals of thebattery 13 used to stabilize the voltage of the terminals is around mF, for example between 1 and 10 mF, - the resistance values R of the
filtering circuit 2 are around one ohm, for example between 1 and 10Ω, - the resistance Rd of the rotor of the electric machine Me is around several tens of mΩ, for example between 0.01Ω and 0.1Ω,
- the inductance values L1, L2, Ld corresponding respectively to the inductors of the
filtering stage 2 and the winding of theelectric machine 5, have values of around several tens of μH, for example between 10 μH and 100 μH.
- the capacitance values of the
- Using the
first control module 16 and thesecond module 17, the control unit prepares chopping duty cycle setpoint values a and as for the voltage step-downconverter 3 and for the voltage step-upconverter 4, satisfying the following three objectives: -
- controlling the amplitude of the input current If of the voltage step-down
stage 3 and ensuring that this current If is in phase with the input voltage Ve (this control minimizes the phase shift between the input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3 and the input voltage Vc of the voltage step-down stage 3), thereby controlling the power drawn as a function of the power supply network, - obtaining a measured input current Ibat at the “+” terminal of the
battery 13, corresponding to the power supply needs of thebattery 13, these needs being determined by thecharge monitoring module 19 and delivered as the Ibat ref function to thecontrol unit 15, - preventing elimination of the current Id flowing through the inductance coil Ld of the
electric machine 5 so as not to generate unwanted harmonics in the current drawn from the network.
- controlling the amplitude of the input current If of the voltage step-down
- Since the voltage drop in the
filtering stage 2 is negligible for the power range used, the equations of the input filter need not be described. - The voltage Vc at the input of the voltage step-down
stage 3 is deemed to be equal to the input voltage Ve of the power supply network. - The output voltage Vkn of the voltage step-down
stage 3 is a·Ve. As it is equal to a·Ve, the equation of the branch bearing theelectric machine 5 can be written in the following form: -
Rd·Id+Ld·s·Id=a·Ve−a s ·V bat (equation 1) - where s is the derivative operator in relation to time “t”, or
-
- a is the chopping duty cycle of the voltage step-down
stage 3, as the duty cycle of the voltage step-upstage 4. - The chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down
stage 3 can also be written a=If/Id, where If is the input current in the voltage step-upstage 3, and the chopping duty cycle as of the voltage step-upstage 4 is given by as=Ibatt/Id. - The equation (1) can therefore also be written in the following form:
-
- According to
equation 3, the intensity If of the input current of the voltage step-downstage 3 can therefore be used as a control variable to lock the current Id flowing through theelectric machine 5 to a setpoint value Idref prepared such as to prevent the elimination of the current in the inductance coil Ld. - If the input voltage Ve approaches zero, the system becomes uncontrollable, even if it is locked. According to the equations, during these uncontrollable phases, the current Id in the coil Ld of the
electric machine 5 can only drop, as shown inFIG. 4 . - Dividing the value of the intensity If of the input current of the voltage step-down
stage 3 by the value of the intensity Id of the current measured through theelectric machine 5 by definition gives the value of the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-downstage 3. Controlling the voltage step-downstage 3 using the chopping duty cycle setpoint a makes it possible to lock the power supply current Ie of the network to a zero reference, in order to eliminate the phase shift between the current and the voltage at the input of the voltage step-downstage 3, and to lock the current Id flowing through theelectric machine 5 to the desired setpoint value, i.e. the setpoint induction intensity Idref. - The input voltage Vc of the voltage step-down
stage 3, equal to the input voltage Ve of the power supply network, takes the form Vc=Ve=Vm sin(ωt). - The command guarantees that If is in phase with the input voltage. The input current Ie is given by Ie=If+Ic, i.e. Ie=Ifm sin(ωt)+C/2 Vm cos(ωt).
- The current If is therefore an image of the active power taken from the network. This latter is given by the relationship Pactive=Ifm Vm/2, where Ifm=2 Pactive/Vm.
- If the input current Ie is controlled by the input current If of the voltage step-down
stage 3 to eliminate the phase shift, and the current Id flowing through theelectric machine 5 is controlled by the input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3 to prevent elimination of current in the coil Ld of theelectric machine 5, then the third objective of the control provided by thecontrol unit 15 relating to locking the input current in the battery Ibat to the setpoint value Ibat ref delivered by thecharge monitoring module 19 remains to be fulfilled. - To do so, a chopping duty cycle as can for example be applied to the voltage step-up converter such as to satisfy the relationship as=Ibat ref/Id.
- The relationship determining the dynamic of the current through the
electric machine 5, given by the equation (1), directly links the duty cycle as of the voltage step-upstage 4 and the current Id flowing through theelectric machine 5. - It is therefore possible to control as directly from the error between the reference value Idref and the measured value Id flowing through the
electric machine 5. -
FIG. 2a is a schematic view of a first embodiment of thefirst control module 16. The first control module includes open-loop control of the input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3. The input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3 is controlled by calculating the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-downconverter 3. - The chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-down
stage 3 is determined as a function of the setpoint power Pbat ref, determined from the voltage of the battery Vbat and the setpoint battery intensity Ibatt ref, the input voltage Ve of the single-phase power supply network and the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld. - The
first control module 16 receives the battery intensity setpoint Ibat ref at a first input and the voltage measured at the terminals of the battery Vbat at a second input. The setpoint intensity of the battery Tbat ref and the voltage Vbat of the battery are inputted to afirst multiplier 21 which then outputs the setpoint power Pbat ref. - At a third input, the
control module 16 receives the input voltage Ve from the power supply network. Themodule 16 includes asignal analyzer 22 enabling the standardized amplitude signal Vm proportional to the input voltage Ve of the single-phase power supply network to be extracted. The amplitude signal Vm is delivered to a first reversingswitch 23 that outputs the reverse of the amplitude Vm. The reverse Vm of this amplitude is delivered to asecond multiplier 24 that also receives as an input the setpoint power Pbat ref. - The
second multiplier 24 then outputs the amplitude Ifm of the input current of the voltage step-downstage 3 to athird multiplier 25, which also receives as an input the phase signal sin(Ωt) of the input voltage Ve of the single-phase power supply network. - The
third multiplier 25 then outputs the input current If of the output voltage step-downstage 3, firstly to thesecond control module 17 and secondly to afourth multiplier 26. Themodule 16 receives, via a fourth input, the value Id of the intensity of the current flowing through the coil Ld of theelectric machine 5. The value Id of the current flowing through the coil Ld is delivered to a second reversingswitch 27 that outputs the reverse of the intensity Id of the current flowing through the coil Ld to thefourth multiplier 26. - The
fourth multiplier 26 then performs the calculation If/Id and outputs the value of the chopping duty cycle a of the voltage step-downstage 3, enabling the input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3 to be controlled. -
FIG. 2b shows a second embodiment of thefirst control module 16. - In this
module 16, thesecond multiplier 24 has been replaced by amap 28 delivering the amplitude Ifm of the input current If of the voltage step-downstage 3 as a function of the amplitude V, of the input voltage Ve and of the setpoint power Pbat ref. -
FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of thesecond control module 17. - In the
charging device 1, the current Ibat flowing through thebattery 13 is controlled by the voltage step-upstage 4. Indeed the current Ibat of the battery is given by the relationship Ibat=asId. - Thus, the current Ibat in the
battery 13 can simply be locked to the related reference value with as=Ibat ref/Id. - It is also possible to add a correction loop if the current measurement of the battery is available. In this case, the following is obtained:
-
- where α is a setting parameter.
- The
second control module 17 includes closed-loop control of the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld of theelectric machine 5. - The
second control module 17 receives, at a first input, a value Ie of the input intensity of the power supply network. This intensity value Ie is delivered to amodule 31 determining the value of the setpoint induction intensity Idref. Thesecond control module 17 receives, at a second input, the value Id of the intensity of the current flowing through the coil Ld of theelectric machine 5. The value Id of the intensity is delivered to a negative input of afirst subtracter 32 that receives at a positive input the value Idref of the setpoint induction intensity. - The
first subtracter 32 then outputs the difference between the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld and the setpoint inductance intensity Id ref to a proportional/integral controller 30. - The proportional/
integral controller 30 includes two branches in parallel, the first of which includes a proportional control module Kp and the second includes an integral control module Ki and an integration module i. - The
second control module 17 receives, at a third input, the value If of the intensity of the input current of the voltage step-downstage 3 delivered by thefirst control module 16. The intensity If is delivered to afirst multiplier 33, which also receives as input the input voltage Ve of the single-phase network received at a fourth input of thesecond control module 17. - The
first multiplier 33 thus outputs a value Pactive of the active power. This value Pactive is inputted to asecond multiplier 34 that also receives as input the reverse of the current Id, the current Id having previously been delivered to a first reversingswitch 35. - The
second multiplier 34 performs the calculation Pactive/ Id and outputs a value Vkn of the output voltage of the voltage step-downstage 3. The voltage Vkn of the voltage step-downstage 3 is delivered to a positive input of asecond subtracter 36 that receives on a negative input the output from the proportional/integral controller 30. - The
second subtracter 36 then outputs the sum of the difference between the intensity Id of the current flowing through the inductance coil Ld and the setpoint inductance intensity Id ref corrected by the proportional/integral controller 30, with the output voltage Vkn of the voltage step-downstage 3 at the input of athird multiplier 37. Thethird multiplier 37 also receives as input the reverse of the battery voltage Vbat, the battery voltage Vbat having been received at a fifth input of the second control module and delivered in advance to a second reversingswitch 38. - The
third multiplier 37 then outputs the setpoint value of the chopping duty cycle as of the voltage step-upstage 4. - The
second control module 17 also includes a feedback loop between the output of thethird multiplier 37 and the input of the branch of the proportional/integral controller 30 containing the integral control module K. - If the value of the chopping duty cycle as of the voltage step-up
stage 4 is approximately 0 or 1, the integral control branch is deactivated. - This feedback loop is an overspeed protection technique used to overcome the loss of control of the device when the input voltage Ve approaches zero. Indeed during uncontrollable phases, control is saturated, i.e. the duty cycles of the switches, or IGBT transistors, are at 1, as it is not able to reduce the difference. To prevent this error from continuing to be integrated, the feedback loop is used. Accordingly, once the device can be controlled, the current Id flowing through the coil Ld of the
electric machine 5 is brought to the reference value Idref. - The use of this feedback loop also makes it possible to control a system that has a very-low-inductance coil Ld. The use of a low-inductance coil makes it possible to reduce the volume of the charger.
- The invention provides an on-board charging device for a motor vehicle designed to be connected to an external single-phase power supply network, incorporating within its circuit the winding of an electric machine of the vehicle, and making it possible to control the voltage step-down converter and the voltage step-up converter such as to maintain a reduced phase shift between the current and the voltage drawn from the single-phase power supply network.
Claims (1)
1. A device for charging a battery (13), in particular a battery of an electric-traction motor vehicle, from a single-phase power supply network, comprising a filtering stage (2) intended to be connected to the single-phase network, a voltage step-down stage (3) connected to the filtering stage (2), a voltage step-up stage (4) intended to be connected to the battery (13) and coupled to the voltage step-down stage (3) via an inductive component (Ld) such as an inductance coil, a control unit (15) able to impose chopping duty cycles (a, as) on the voltage step-down stage (3) and the voltage step-up stage (4),
characterized in that the control unit (15) includes means for compensating for the phase shift between the input current (If) of the voltage step-down stage (3) and the input voltage (Vc) of the voltage step-down stage (3),
the control unit (15) including a first open-loop control module (16) able to determine a chopping duty cycle (a) of the voltage step-down stage (3) as a function of the voltage (Ve) of the single-phase power supply network, a setpoint power (Pbat ref), and the intensity (Id) of the current flowing through the inductive component (Ld), to compensate for the phase shift between the input current (If) of the voltage step-down stage (3) and the input voltage (Vc) of the voltage step-down stage (3), and to control the power (Pbat) received by the battery as a function of the setpoint power Pbat ref),
the control unit (15) including a second control module (17) able to determine a chopping duty cycle (as) of the voltage step-up stage (4) as a function of the voltage (Vkn) at the output of the voltage step-down stage (3), the voltage (Vbat) of the battery (13), and the difference between the setpoint induction intensity (Id ref) and the intensity (Id) of the current flowing through the inductive component (Ld), providing closed-loop control of the intensity (Ibat) of the current flowing through the battery (13).
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US15/222,662 US20170028855A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2016-07-28 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
Applications Claiming Priority (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
FR1101177A FR2974253B1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2011-04-14 | DEVICE FOR CHARGING A BATTERY OF A MOTOR VEHICLE FROM A SINGLE PHASE POWER SUPPLY, AND METHOD FOR CONTROLLING THE DEVICE |
FR1101177 | 2011-04-14 | ||
PCT/FR2012/050806 WO2012140374A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2012-04-12 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
US201414111925A | 2014-03-25 | 2014-03-25 | |
US15/222,662 US20170028855A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2016-07-28 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
Related Parent Applications (2)
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PCT/FR2012/050806 Continuation WO2012140374A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2012-04-12 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
US14/111,925 Continuation US9469204B2 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2012-04-12 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
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US20170028855A1 true US20170028855A1 (en) | 2017-02-02 |
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US15/222,662 Abandoned US20170028855A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2016-07-28 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
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US14/111,925 Active 2033-03-25 US9469204B2 (en) | 2011-04-14 | 2012-04-12 | Device for charging a battery of a motor vehicle on the basis of a single-phase power supply network, and method of controlling the device |
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US (2) | US9469204B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP2697886B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP6017536B2 (en) |
KR (1) | KR101882909B1 (en) |
CN (1) | CN103597704B (en) |
AR (1) | AR086013A1 (en) |
BR (1) | BR112013026406B1 (en) |
ES (1) | ES2545630T3 (en) |
FR (1) | FR2974253B1 (en) |
RU (1) | RU2587152C2 (en) |
TW (1) | TWI547056B (en) |
WO (1) | WO2012140374A1 (en) |
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FR2990078B1 (en) * | 2012-04-27 | 2014-05-09 | Renault Sa | METHOD FOR CONTROLLING CHARGE OF A BATTERY |
TWI473388B (en) * | 2012-12-03 | 2015-02-11 | Lite On Technology Corp | Current compensation module, charging apparatus, and charging apparatus controlling method |
FR3005216B1 (en) | 2013-04-29 | 2015-04-10 | Renault Sa | METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR CHARGING A MOTOR VEHICLE BATTERY BASED ON TEMPERATURE |
FR3010796B1 (en) * | 2013-09-17 | 2017-06-09 | Renault Sas | DEVICE FOR MONITORING A MOTOR VEHICLE BATTERY CHARGER AND METHOD THEREOF |
FR3010849B1 (en) | 2013-09-18 | 2015-10-30 | Renault Sas | DEVICE FOR CHARGING A MOTOR VEHICLE BATTERY FOR COMPENSATING HARMONICS, MOTOR VEHICLE PROVIDED WITH SUCH CHARGE DEVICE AND CORRESPONDING LOADING METHOD |
US10476283B2 (en) * | 2013-09-27 | 2019-11-12 | Intel Corporation | Bi-directional charger for battery device with control logic based on sensed voltage and device type |
FR3011400B1 (en) | 2013-10-01 | 2015-09-04 | Renault Sa | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR CHARGING A TRACTION BATTERY CURRENT CALLING CURRENT CAPACITIES PARASITES |
FR3024605B1 (en) | 2014-07-31 | 2016-07-22 | Renault Sa | METHOD AND DEVICE FOR CHARGING A MOTOR VEHICLE BATTERY BASED ON THE IMPEDANCE OF A POWER SUPPLY NETWORK AND A MOTOR VEHICLE PROVIDED WITH SUCH CHARGE DEVICE |
FR3026244B1 (en) * | 2014-09-22 | 2017-05-12 | Renault Sas | DEVICE AND METHOD FOR DETERMINING A CORRECTED SETTING OF THE NEUTRAL CURRENT OF A NON-GALVANIC INSULATING CHARGER FOR AN ELECTRIC OR HYBRID MOTOR VEHICLE BATTERY |
FR3027742B1 (en) * | 2014-10-24 | 2016-11-04 | Renault Sa | DEVICE AND METHOD FOR CHARGING A BATTERY FROM A THREE-PHASE NETWORK HAVING DEGRADED CHARGE MODE |
EP3023291A1 (en) * | 2014-11-20 | 2016-05-25 | ABB Technology AG | Converter system for electrical drive mechanism for a rail vehicle |
FR3048830B1 (en) * | 2016-03-09 | 2018-03-09 | Renault S.A.S | METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR MONOPHASE CONTROL OF A CHARGER OF ELECTRICAL OR HYBRID TRACTION VEHICLES ONBOARD WITHOUT GALVANIC ISOLATION |
DE102017109321A1 (en) * | 2017-05-02 | 2018-11-08 | Hanon Systems | EMC filters |
FR3072516B1 (en) * | 2017-10-13 | 2019-11-22 | Renault S.A.S | DEVICE FOR CHARGING AN ELECTRICAL ACCUMULATION BATTERY |
DE102018129411A1 (en) | 2018-11-22 | 2020-05-28 | Dr. Ing. H.C. F. Porsche Aktiengesellschaft | Method and system for cooling in a current compensation circuit |
EP4236048A3 (en) | 2019-05-24 | 2023-10-25 | Huawei Digital Power Technologies Co., Ltd. | Integrated charger and motor control system comprising a transformer and multi-level power converters |
JP7208188B2 (en) * | 2020-04-01 | 2023-01-18 | 株式会社豊田中央研究所 | Vehicle-mounted power converter |
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JPH10215522A (en) * | 1996-11-26 | 1998-08-11 | Nippon Soken Inc | Power supply |
JP4426807B2 (en) * | 2003-10-02 | 2010-03-03 | セイコーインスツル株式会社 | Buck-boost switching regulator control circuit and buck-boost switching regulator |
RU46135U1 (en) * | 2004-03-30 | 2005-06-10 | Общество С Ограниченной Ответственностью "Агроимпорт" | VOLTAGE CONVERTER FOR CHARGING THE BATTERY |
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KR100911541B1 (en) * | 2007-07-27 | 2009-08-10 | 현대자동차주식회사 | Bi-Directional Tri-State PWM DC To DC Converter For Fuel Cell Vehicle |
JP5260092B2 (en) * | 2008-03-10 | 2013-08-14 | 株式会社日立製作所 | Power conversion device and power generation conversion system |
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FR2943188B1 (en) * | 2009-03-11 | 2013-04-12 | Renault Sas | FAST CHARGING DEVICE FOR AN ELECTRIC VEHICLE. |
FR2946810B1 (en) | 2009-06-16 | 2012-12-14 | Renault Sas | REVERSIBLE FAST CHARGING DEVICE FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLE |
JP5577057B2 (en) * | 2009-07-02 | 2014-08-20 | ダイヤモンド電機株式会社 | In-vehicle charger |
CN201726182U (en) * | 2010-07-05 | 2011-01-26 | 上海新华电子设备有限公司 | High voltage ultracapacitor power battery charger |
FR2964510B1 (en) | 2010-09-07 | 2013-06-14 | Renault Sa | CHARGING DEVICE FOR AUTOMOBILE BATTERY AND METHOD FOR MANAGING THE DEVICE. |
-
2011
- 2011-04-14 FR FR1101177A patent/FR2974253B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
-
2012
- 2012-04-12 WO PCT/FR2012/050806 patent/WO2012140374A1/en active Application Filing
- 2012-04-12 CN CN201280029133.0A patent/CN103597704B/en active Active
- 2012-04-12 RU RU2013150632/07A patent/RU2587152C2/en active
- 2012-04-12 BR BR112013026406-3A patent/BR112013026406B1/en active IP Right Grant
- 2012-04-12 US US14/111,925 patent/US9469204B2/en active Active
- 2012-04-12 ES ES12722414.5T patent/ES2545630T3/en active Active
- 2012-04-12 KR KR1020137029967A patent/KR101882909B1/en active IP Right Grant
- 2012-04-12 JP JP2014504381A patent/JP6017536B2/en active Active
- 2012-04-12 EP EP12722414.5A patent/EP2697886B1/en active Active
- 2012-04-13 TW TW101113247A patent/TWI547056B/en active
- 2012-04-13 AR ARP120101295A patent/AR086013A1/en active IP Right Grant
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2016
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KR101882909B1 (en) | 2018-07-27 |
TWI547056B (en) | 2016-08-21 |
BR112013026406A2 (en) | 2020-11-03 |
US9469204B2 (en) | 2016-10-18 |
CN103597704A (en) | 2014-02-19 |
WO2012140374A1 (en) | 2012-10-18 |
JP6017536B2 (en) | 2016-11-02 |
AR086013A1 (en) | 2013-11-13 |
CN103597704B (en) | 2016-05-04 |
FR2974253B1 (en) | 2013-04-26 |
JP2014517665A (en) | 2014-07-17 |
US20140197788A1 (en) | 2014-07-17 |
EP2697886A1 (en) | 2014-02-19 |
TW201249058A (en) | 2012-12-01 |
EP2697886B1 (en) | 2015-06-03 |
FR2974253A1 (en) | 2012-10-19 |
ES2545630T3 (en) | 2015-09-14 |
BR112013026406B1 (en) | 2021-02-02 |
KR20140034191A (en) | 2014-03-19 |
RU2587152C2 (en) | 2016-06-10 |
RU2013150632A (en) | 2015-05-20 |
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