From 2012 to 2015, Taiwan government has a most important technology project is Taiwan Photon Source (TPS), the total budget of TPS fund to over US300 million. It set up a synchrotron storage ring (electron energy of 3.3 GeV, circumference of 518 m, and low emittance) that provides one of the world's brightest synchrotron sources of x-rays. This study presents a compensator design for corrector magnet power supply to avoid limitations in stabilizing the frequency when the machine output current load is valid. A lead-lag compensator had been built in a full-bridge converter to improve the system bandwidth. Lead-lag compensators influence various disciplines, such as robotics, satellite control, automobile diagnostics, and laser frequency stabilization. These components are important building blocks in analog control systems and can also be used in digital control. A 50V output voltage and 10A output current prototype converter is fabricated in the laboratory. From the experimental results, the effectiveness of the control loop design can be verified from the gain margin and phase margin. K: Analogue electronic circuits; Analysis and statistical methods; Acceleration cavities and magnets superconducting (high-temperature superconductor; radiation hardened magnets; normal-conducting; permanent magnet devices; wigglers and undulators) 1Corresponding author.
A new high step-up voltage converter that combines a switch capacitor and isolated transformer, together with a passive clamp circuit, is employed to reduce voltage stress on the main power switch. The voltage stress of the power switch should be clamped to 1/4 Vo, and the proposed converter can achieve high step-up voltage gain with appropriate duty ratio. The energy of the leakage inductor can be recycled by the clamp capacitor because of the passive clamp circuit, and low On-state resistance RDS(on) of the power switch can be adopted to reduce the conduction loss. In this paper, several mathematical derivations are presented, CCM and DCM operating principle are discussed, and experimental results are provided to verify the effectiveness of converter topology. Finally, a 24-V-input voltage to 200-V-output voltage and a 150 W output power prototype converter are fabricated in the laboratory.
This paper is the study of a low-current-ripple and high-bandwidth corrector power supply. The main circuit of this power supply is using a full bridge (H-bridge) structure, and the output current through the high-precision direct current current transducers (DCCT) to transfer the reference voltage to the controller. Previous TPS corrector power supply had a 4.7 kHz current bandwidth, and its output current ripple was 100 μA. Such current ripple and bandwidth do not satisfy the requirements of a rapidly orbiting feedback system of air core loading. Therefore, our research team designed a novel prototype power supply with a high bandwidth (more than 10 kHz) and low output current ripple (less than 10 μA) which was developed via a novel topology circuit. The operation frequency of the main power switch's n-type metal-oxide-semiconductor logic of this novel circuit is increased to 245 kHz. Moreover, the output results of the filter inductor and filter capacitor are modified to 80 μH and 2.46 μF, respectively. The prototype power supply bandwidth reached 10.546 kHz and increase of 124% and its output current ripple was lowered below than 5 μA. The properties of this corrector power supply are very important for the beam correction in storage rings. Finally, A circuit with an input voltage of 48 V, a maximum output current of 10 A, and an output power of 400 W is tested in a laboratory to verify the performance of the developed corrector for the National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.