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Reluctance: I. Magnetic Circuit Concept

1) The document discusses magnetic circuit concepts and designs inductors using an area product approach. It explains how an air gap affects inductance. 2) Key steps in the inductor design process include selecting a core based on the required area product, determining the number of turns, selecting wire size, and adjusting the air gap to achieve the needed inductance value. 3) An example design calculates component values for a buck converter inductors including turns number, wire gauge, air gap size, and verifies the design meets power loss and efficiency requirements.

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Mahabub Hossain
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
235 views12 pages

Reluctance: I. Magnetic Circuit Concept

1) The document discusses magnetic circuit concepts and designs inductors using an area product approach. It explains how an air gap affects inductance. 2) Key steps in the inductor design process include selecting a core based on the required area product, determining the number of turns, selecting wire size, and adjusting the air gap to achieve the needed inductance value. 3) An example design calculates component values for a buck converter inductors including turns number, wire gauge, air gap size, and verifies the design meets power loss and efficiency requirements.

Uploaded by

Mahabub Hossain
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1

I. Magnetic Circuit Concept



Magnetic circuit in which flux is guided through high permeability
ferromagnetic material.


H B
R MMF dl H Ni F
ds B
c
s

u
|
=
= = = =
=
}
}

MMF : magnetomotive force

Applying Ampere`s circuital law to the toroidal core
m m
c
l
Ni
r
Ni
H
Ni dl H
=
H
=
=
}
2

S
l
R
m

= : reluctance of the magnetic path


Ni R
P
|
= =
1
: permeance
P
Ni i
N
i
L
N N
= = = =
2 2
| |

001227njh01
S
lm
R

=
l
m
rm
S
H
Ni
: reluctance
Ni
R
S
l
Ni
S H S B
m
= = = =
1
|
2
a)

B
H
b)
BS = u
Ni Hl =
m l
S
p

=
c)
u = N
i
P L
N
2
=
990102chn04

Change from material properties (a) to device properties involves scaling of the
coordinates by geometrical factors (cross-section, magnetic path length ) (b)
and turns ratios c)

II. Magnetic circuit with Air-Gap

1. The reluctance of the airgap
N
i
lm
lg
Ni
R m
R g
a)
b)
990102chn06

(a)Magnetic circuits with air-gap (b) its linear reluctance model

S
l
R
m
m

=
: Reluctance of the core
S
l
R
o
g
g

=
: Reluctance of the gap
g m R R
Ni
+
= |
or
) (
1 1
2
2 2
P P N
P P
N
R R
N
g m
g m
g m
i
i i
N =
+
=
+
= = |

) (
2
P
g
P
m
N
i
Leff = =


3
In practice, the reluctance of the airgap is often much larger than that of the
magnetic path even though
l l g m
>>
, since the permeability of airgap is so much
smaller, that is,

((
o

r o
or
1 (( = =


r
g
m
o
g
r o
m
g
m
l
l
l
l
R
R
S
S


R
m
<<
R
g

P
m
>>
P
g

L=
N
2
(
P
m

P
g
)
N
2
P
g


l
N
l
g
o
g
S
L

2
) ( =

2. Device or Inductance Model



P N L
P N L
g g
m m
=
=
2
2


R
m
<<
R
g

P
m
>>
P
g

Leff
=
L
m

L
g

L
g


3.Effects of Air-gap on the device characteristics

i
N o a i r - g a p
( l a r g e L )
W i t h a i r - g a p
( s m a l l L )
sat
sat
s l o p e = L
IL I' L

V
Lg Lm


4
The saturation is independent of the air gap.
The air-gap decreases the inductance but it enhances the current
handing capacity of the inductor.

Note. If Air-gap exists (Air-gap is increased) ,
1. increase the number of turns (N) to sustain the same value of
L.
2. L is decreased but the range of current that can carry is
increased.

III. Periodic Waveform

To avoid Saturation ,
V Ts
N B S
V Ts N B S
V Ts
B S
N low er it
V
B S f
N low er it
sat sat
sat
sat
sat s
.
.
.
.
( lim )
( lim )
2
2 2
4
4
4
s
s
s
s



















V
L
N
S 980103YCY02

t
VTs/2
i
sat
V.dt Li
-
sat
980103YCY02
V
L
Area = VT s / 2
V
-V
Ts/2
Ts
t

5
1. Basic Equation : V Ts N B S sat . s 4
1) When Ts is fixed , the larger B sat
Smaller S & Smaller N
Smaller Core Size
2) When B sat is fixed , the smaller Ts ( the larger fs )
Smaller S & Smaller N
Smaller Core Size

2. Basic Equation : V Ts N B S sat . 4
( V.Ts = fixed , S = fixed )
A : optimal N
Most efficient use of
the core.
optimal design.
B : Small N
Result in Saturation.
C : Large N
Inefficient use of core.
Oversized Core.


3. Flux Balance Condition



A : area of A = area of B

To avoid the flux walking
or Saturation.

A A increase decrease
V t V t 1 1 2 2 . .
Volt-Second Balance




i
sat
C
A
B
980103YCY03

V
L
V
t
1
2
A
B
-V
t2
t1
IL
980103YCY03

6
IV. Inductor Design Using Area Product Approach

1. Electrical Specification

DC current IL is determined from the Load requirement.
Current ripple , AiL determines the value of the inductance.

(EX) Buck Converter


A
A
i
V V
L
t
L
V V
i
t
L
g o
on
g o
L
on
=


=



Here, in general rule #1,
AiL dont exceed 20% of IL
to reduce the output ripple.


Ai
I
L
L
< 0 2 .

Winding Loss(I R
2
) determines the current density J.
Here, in general rule #2, J A cm A cm = 250 1000
2 2
~ ,
the common value is 450 A cm
2
.

2. Design Strategy





S : Cross-sectional area
W : Window-area




VL
iL
t
t
AiL
IL
980104ycy01

W
S
980104ycy01

7
Strategy #1. Full utilization of flux capability.


iL
t
iL

*
IL
*
s l o p e = L
s a t
990102chn05


) 1 (
S
*
B
*
L
I L
N
*
I L S
*
B N
*
) i
2
1
I
*
I (
8 . 0 ~ 6 . 0
* *
I L
L
L L L
s L

=
= =
+ =
= =

A


N : the number of turns.
B
*
: 0.25~0.32[T] for ferrite.
*
L
I : peak inductor current.

Strategy #2. Full utilization of the window area.
) 2 (
*
L
I N J W k =
k : Window utilization factor (0.3<k<0.6)
From (1) and (2) ,

k J B
2
)
*
L
I ( L
*
B N
*
L
I L
J k
*
L
I N
S W AP

= =
AP : Area Product (Energy handling Capacity)
8

3. Inductor Design Steps

1). Pick the core with the area product closest but higher than the one
calculated by :

k J
*
B
2
)
*
L
I ( L
S W AP

= =
B
*
: 0.25[T] for ferrite ( . ) m ax B = 0 25
J : 450 ( / ) A cm
2

k : 0.3
2). Determine the number of turns by :

S
*
B
*
L
I L
N

= ( lower limit )
3). Determine the wire cross-section.
A
I
J
w = and the wire size.
4). Using the mean length per turn data , find the winding loss.
P I R I is rm s value loss =
2
( .)
5). Calculate the air-gap by using :

) P
. 2
N L (
l
S
2
N
L g
g
o
=

=


or more practically adjust the air-gap to obtain the desired inductance.
6). Find the core loss from the core data sheet.
Loss in core I) Hysterisis loss( f, minor loops area)
II) Eddy current loss: neglect in ferrite meterial










9

4. Inductor design example.

When the following values is given by , input voltage : Vg = 12 (V)
output voltage : Vo = 5 (V)
load resistor : R load = 1 (O)
switching frequency : fs = 40 kHz

1) Determining the values of the inductance of L such that
Ai
I
L
L
= 0.2 ,

H L
DT
L
V V
I i s
o g
L in ax L
73
2 . 0 I I m m
~

= = = A

from : # L i A = iL*0.2 = (Vo/Rload )*0.2 = (5/1)*0.2 = 1 [A]
# D = Output / Input = 5 / 12
# Ts = 1 / fs = 25 * 10
-6
[sec]

2) The steady-state waveforms of V t i t L L ( ) , ( ),











V
Vo
L
i
L
+
Vg
+
S
C
Buck Converter
980105ycy01

VL
iL
t
t
AiL
IL=5A
-5(v)
7(v)
ton
ton Ts
980105ycy01

10




[Inductor Design Steps]

1) Pick the core with the area product.

k J
*
B
2
*
I L
S W AP

= = =(73*10
-6
*5.5
2
)/(0.25*450*0.3)=6.54*10
-9

AP = ) ( 10 54 . 6
4 9
m

= W.S = A A cw e .
A cw : Cross-sectional winding area of core.(
2
m )
A e : Effective cross-sectional area. (
2
m )=S
Select PC44PQ26/20Z-12 ; AP=7.188
9
10


Ae=119
6
10



2) Determine the number of turns by ,

) ( 14
5 . 13
6
10 119 25 . 0
5 . 5
6
10 73
*
*
turns N
S B
I L
N
>
~

=

3) Determine the wire cross-section area ,

1 )
2
/ ( 5 . 4 / ) ( 5 )
2
/ ( 450 / ) ( 5 ~ = = = mm A A cm A A
J
I
Aw
Select #16AWG (with Bare Area = ) ( 324 . 1
2
mm )

4) Calculate the air-gap by using ,


g
o
l
S
2
N
L

=

lg = 0.635 (mm)

We can select Core PC44PQ26/20Z-12, and should wind the number of
14 turns as the #16AWG using BE-28-1110CP .
And then , we should the value of L(=73uH) as adjusting the air-gap.



11




[ Winding Loss , Core Loss and efficiency ]

To finding the winding loss (P I R loss =
2
) ,
The resistance of #16AWG wire : ) / (
6
10 8 . 131 cm O


Average length of turns around the bobbin of BPQ26/20-1112CP
bobbin :
l m m w = 56 2 .
Effective resistance of the wire : ) ( 37 . 10 14 62 . 5 10 8 . 131
6
O = ~

m R
P I R l o s s =
2
=
3 2
10 37 . 10 5

=0.259(W)


To finding the core loss from the core data sheet ,


A A
A
A
A
A
A
A


=
=

= =


=
~
=
= =
N B S
B
N S
L
i
s lo p ein the i graph
B m T
B
m T flux density
P W m at C kH z
P P C ore Volum e m W
cv
coreloss cv
75 10
6
41 45
2
20
0 5
3
60 40
2 745
( .)
. ( )
( ) ( )
. ( / ) ( , )
. ( )



For finding the overall efficiency of the inductor :


q =
+

=
P P P
P
o u t p u t c o r e l o s sw i n d i n g l o s s
o u t p u t
( )
. %
100
98 5

12









Inductor design






















(2005. 8. 4)

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