Performance Evaluation of the Two-Input Buck Converter as a Visible Light Communication High-Brightness LED Driver Based on Split Power
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Working Principle of the TIBuck DC/DC Converter
2.1. Formatting of Mathematical Components
2.2. Working Principle
2.3. Advantages over the Buck DC/DC Converter
- Lower switching harmonic components. The lower the amplitude of the switching node voltage, vsw(t), the lower the switching harmonic components. These harmonic components result in undesirable output voltage noise and must be attenuated by the output filter. Reducing the harmonic components of vsw(t) simplifies the design of the output filter compared to the equivalent in a traditional Buck DC/DC converter, allowing either the reduction in filter order (reducing hardware complexity and number of elements) or increased cut-off frequency (increasing the bandwidth of the converter) [19]. Figure 6 depicts the filtering process, illustrating the separation between frequencies stated by Equation (7).
- Lower switching losses. The switching losses mostly depend on the switching frequency, characteristics of the switches and voltage stress [25]. According to Equation (7), for a given bandwidth, the switching frequency must be kept high enough for the correct operation of the DC/DC converter as a VLC driver. Increasing the switching frequency of the DC/DC converter leads to a significant increase in switching losses. To track communication signals into the bandwidth of HB-LEDs, the switching frequency of the VLC driver would need to be in the range of 10–15 MHz. The characteristics of the switches depend on the technology available, and it is assumed that the best possible switch could always be used. At this point, only the voltage stress of the switches can be modified to reduce the switching losses In a TIBuck DC/DC converter, the voltage stress of the switch is V1 − V2, which is lower than the regular Buck DC/DC converter case (i.e., V1). This reduction in the voltage stress is also an advantage in switch selection, because the lower the voltage rated, the better the characteristics and performance at high-switching-frequency operation.
- Higher duty-cycle resolution. Increased switching frequency has a negative effect on the duty-cycle resolution (i.e., number of discrete values of the duty cycle, Csw, using a digital control). From Equation (5), for a fixed clock frequency fclk, if fsw increases, then the resolution of the duty cycle decreases (i.e., by the Csw decrease). On top of this decrease in the duty-cycle resolution in high-frequency converters, the behaviour of the HB-LED as a load imposes a further decrease in the resolution, which is the case in designing VLC drivers. As depicted previously in Figure 1, only the useful voltage range between Vth(T) and Vmax(T) can be used for HB-LED as a load, to avoid distortions in the safe operating range (in this initial approach, temperature dependency is ignored). This means that only the values of the duty cycle that generate voltage levels in this range are useful. Figure 7 represents the useful duty-cycle range of a Buck DC/DC converter and a TIBuck DC/DC converter (optimized for this task) using a string of n HB-LEDs as a load (for the sake of simplification, sinusoidal waveforms are used as communication signals). The duty-cycle range of a Buck DC/DC converter can be easily obtained from Equation (8) just by making V2 = 0 V. Its output voltage range goes from 0 V to V1 = nVmax(T) by maximizing the communications signal (i.e., VΩ = Vpp). That means that there is no way to fit the Csw possible duty-cycle values within the useful voltage range of the HB-LED load, which further reduces the resolution for tracking the output voltage (i.e., higher step height in the digital sawtooth, in green, in Figure 7). However, the output voltage range of the TIBuck DC/DC converter goes from V2 to V1, and can be adapted to fit all Csw possible duty-cycle values within the useful voltage range of the HB-LED load, maximizing the resolution of the TIBuck DC/DC converter for tracking the output voltage (i.e., lower step height in the digital sawtooth, in red, in Figure 7). For this purpose, the following expressions must be met.
3. The Use of the TIBuck DC/DC Converter as a VLC Driver
3.1. The Proposed TIBuck DC/DC Converter with Only One Input Voltage Source
3.2. Effect of HB-LED Temperature Dependency
3.3. Analysis of the Switching Harmonic Components of the Proposed TIBuck DC/DC Converter
4. Power Flow Analysis
4.1. Division of Output Power
4.2. Input Power Calculation
4.3. Power Flow of the TIBuck DC/DC Converter
4.4. Power Flow of the Proposed TIBuck DC/DC Converter
4.5. Overall Efficiency
4.6. Temperature and Partial-Efficiency Dependencies of the Overall Efficiency of the Proposed TIBuck DC/DC Converter
5. Experimental Results
5.1. Design of the Auxiliary Buck DC/DC Converter
5.2. Modulation Scheme
5.3. Design of the TIBuck DC/DC Converter
5.4. Experimental Waveforms
5.5. Communication Performance
5.6. Comparison with Other Approaches
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Qbu-1 and Qbu-2 | Gate Driver | Lbu | Cbu |
---|---|---|---|
CSD88539 | ISL6700 | 49 μH | 9 μF |
Lti-1 | Cti-1 | Lti-2 | Cti-2 | Lti-3 | Cti-3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.7 μH | 9.9 nF | 2.2 μH | 9.9 nF | 1.9 μH | 5.72 nF |
Ref. | Topology | Input Voltage Sources | Modulation Scheme | PO (W) | iomax/2Io | fS (MHz) | η(%) | Distance (cm) | Bit Rate (Mbps) | EVMrms (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[21] | Two-phase Buck DC/DC converter with high-order filter | 1 | 16-QAM | 10 | 0.9 | 4.5 | 87.5 | 100 | 0.5 | - |
[22] | Two-phase Buck DC/DC converter with high-order filter + synchronous Buck DC/DC converter | 2 1* | OFDM | 10 | 0.8 | 10 2* | 93.6 | 20 | 7.5 | 15 |
[27] | Fly-Buck DC/DC converter + Class B power amplifier | 1 | OFDM | 20 | 0.42 | 0.1 | 94 | 50 | 6 | 5 |
This work | Proposed TIBuck DC/DC converter | 1 | 64-QAM | 7 | 1 | 10 3* | 94 | 40 | 1.5 | 12 |
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Aller, D.G.; Lamar, D.G.; García-Mere, J.R.; Arias, M.; Rodriguez, J.; Sebastian, J. Performance Evaluation of the Two-Input Buck Converter as a Visible Light Communication High-Brightness LED Driver Based on Split Power. Sensors 2024, 24, 6392. https://doi.org/10.3390/s24196392
Aller DG, Lamar DG, García-Mere JR, Arias M, Rodriguez J, Sebastian J. Performance Evaluation of the Two-Input Buck Converter as a Visible Light Communication High-Brightness LED Driver Based on Split Power. Sensors. 2024; 24(19):6392. https://doi.org/10.3390/s24196392
Chicago/Turabian StyleAller, Daniel G., Diego G. Lamar, Juan R. García-Mere, Manuel Arias, Juan Rodriguez, and Javier Sebastian. 2024. "Performance Evaluation of the Two-Input Buck Converter as a Visible Light Communication High-Brightness LED Driver Based on Split Power" Sensors 24, no. 19: 6392. https://doi.org/10.3390/s24196392