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Article

A Single-Stage LED Streetlight Driver with Soft-Switching and Interleaved PFC Features

Department of Electrical Engineering, I-Shou University, Dashu District, Kaohsiung City 84001, Taiwan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Electronics 2019, 8(8), 911; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8080911
Submission received: 10 July 2019 / Revised: 14 August 2019 / Accepted: 15 August 2019 / Published: 18 August 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Latest Developments in LED Drivers)

Abstract

:
This paper presents a single-stage driver with soft-switching and interleaved power-factor correction (PFC) features suitable for light-emitting diode (LED) energy-saving streetlight applications. The proposed LED streetlight driver integrates an interleaved buck-boost PFC converter with coupled inductors and a half-bridge LLC resonant converter into a single-stage power-conversion circuit with reduced voltage stress on the DC-linked capacitor and power switches, and it is suitable for operating at high utility-line voltages. Furthermore, coupled inductors in the interleaved buck-boost PFC converter are operated in discontinuous-conduction mode (DCM) for accomplishing PFC, and the half-bridge LLC resonant converter features zero-voltage switching (ZVS) to reduce switching losses of power switches, and zero-current switching (ZCS) to decrease conduction losses of power diodes. Operational modes and design considerations for the proposed LED streetlight driver are introduced. Finally, a 144 W (36V/4A)-rated LED prototype driver is successfully developed and implemented for supplying a streetlight module and operating with a utility-line input voltage of 220 V. High power factor, low output-voltage ripple factor, low output-current ripple factor, and high efficiency are achieved in the proposed LED streetlight driver.

1. Introduction

With recent developments in green lighting and energy saving around the world, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are characterized by their small size, long life, high brightness and environmental friendliness [1,2,3]. As a result, LEDs have begun to play important roles as new solid-state light sources for indoor and outdoor energy-saving applications in our daily lives [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11].
Streetlights that illuminate the road are designed to provide a safe night-time environment for cars, motorcycles, cyclists and pedestrians. The traditional source of illumination for streetlight applications is high-pressure mercury lamps, because of their low installation cost. However, high-pressure mercury lamps consume more energy and save less electricity. In addition, the discharge tubes of these lamps contain mercury vapor, which is harmful and can cause pollution to our environment when the lamp is exhausted. Therefore, LED streetlights with energy-saving features have begun replacing traditional high-pressure mercury street lamps [12,13]. Traditional two-stage drivers for LED streetlight applications include AC–DC converters with power-factor correction (PFC) and DC–DC converters that provide rated voltage and current to the LED streetlight [14,15]. However, the circuit is not efficient, and requires more power switches and components in a conventional two-stage streetlight driver. The literature presents some single-stage streetlight drivers that integrate an AC–DC converter with a DC–DC converter [16,17,18,19,20]. Figure 1 shows an existing single-stage LED streetlight driver, which combines an interleaved boost converter with a half-bridge-type LLC resonant converter into a single-stage power converter for supplying the LED street-lighting module at a utility-line voltage of 110V [16]. The LED streetlight driver comprises a low-pass filter, a bridge rectifier (Dr1, Dr2, Dr3 and Dr4), two capacitors (Cin1 and Cin2), two diodes (DB1 and DB2), two inductors (L1 and L2), two power switches (S1 and S2), a DC-linked capacitor CDC, a resonant capacitor Cr and an inductor Lr, a center-tapped transformer T with two output windings, two diodes (D1 and D2), a capacitor Co and the LED streetlight module. This kind of single-stage streetlight driver based on interleaved boost conversion is suitable for operating at utility-line voltages from 100~120 V in American and Asian countries, but will tolerate high voltage levels on the DC-linked capacitor CDC when it operates at higher utility-line voltages due to boost-type power conversion, such as the 220~240 V in European countries. In addition, the voltage stresses of the power switches in this version will increase. Another existing single-stage LED streetlight driver, which integrates an interleaved boost PFC converter with a half-bridge-type series-resonant converter cascaded with a bridge rectifier for supplying the LED street-lighting module at a utility-line voltage of 220 V was proposed in [20], and high voltage stresses of power switches occurred in this version due to the boost-type power conversion; therefore, the level of DC-bus voltage is increased, and two DC-linked capacitors are required.
To meet these challenges, this paper proposes and implements a single-stage LED streetlight driver based on interleaved buck-boost conversion with PFC and soft-switching functions, which is suitable for operating at high utility-line voltages along with reduced voltage levels on the DC-linked capacitor and decreased voltage stresses on the power switches due to a buck-boost-type power conversion. This paper introduces the description and analysis of the operating modes, the design considerations of the key circuit components in the proposed LED streetlight driver, and experimental results obtained from the 144 W (36V/4A)-rated prototype circuit are included.

2. Circuit Derivation and Analysis of the Proposed Single-Stage LED Streetlight Driver

Figure 2a shows the original two-stage LED streetlight driver, which consists of buck-boost PFC converter #1 and buck-boost PFC converter #2 with interleaved operation in series connection with a half-bridge LLC resonant converter. In addition, the two coupled inductors are employed instead of single-winding inductors in order to accomplish buck-boost conversion. Figure 2b shows the presented LED streetlight driver with soft-switching and interleaved PFC feature, which integrates an interleaved buck-boost PFC converter with a half-bridge LLC resonant converter into single-stage power conversion and includes a low-pass filter (Lf and Cf), a bridge rectifier (Dr1, Dr2, Dr3 and Dr4), two capacitors (Cin1 and Cin2), two coupled inductors (LB1 and LB2; LB3 and LB4), four diodes (DB1, DB2, DB3, and DB4), two power switches (S1 and S2), a DC-bus capacitor (CDC), a resonant capacitor (Cr), a resonant inductor (Lr), a center-tapped transformer T with a magnetizing inductor Lm and two output windings, two output diodes D1 and D2, an output capacitor (Co) and the LED streetlight module. In addition, the diodes DB2 and DB3 are used to prevent current from entering the inductors LB2 and LB3 from the AC mains voltage sources. Furthermore, diodes DB1 and DB4 are capable of preventing the inductor currents from returning to the input capacitors Cin1 and Cin2. Since the voltage on the capacitor Cin1 or Cin2 is half of the utility-line voltage, the DC-bus voltage and the peak current of each coupled inductor will also be half. Due to the reduced DC-bus voltage, power switches with decreased voltage-stress can be utilized in the proposed LED streetlight driver, which is advantageous for high utility-line voltage applications.
Figure 3 shows a simplified circuit of the proposed single-stage LED streetlight driver when analyzing its operating modes. To describe the operation of the proposed LED streetlight driver, the following assumptions are made.
(a)
Since the switching frequency of the power switches is much higher than the utility-line frequency, the sinusoidal utility-line voltage can be considered to be a constant value in each high-frequency switching period.
(b)
The voltage sources VREC1 and VREC2 of capacitors Cin1 and Cin2, respectively, represent the rectified input utility-line voltages.
(c)
The power switches S1 and S2 operate complementarily, and their intrinsic body diode and drain-source capacitance are taken into consideration.
(d)
The turn-on voltage drops of diodes (DB1, DB2, DB3, DB4, D1 and D2) are omitted.
(e)
To naturally obtain PFC, the coupled inductors (LB1 and LB2; LB3 and LB4) are designed to operate in discontinuous-conduction mode (DCM).
The operational modes and key waveforms of the LED streetlight driver proposed in this paper are shown in Figure 4 and Figure 5, respectively, and the analysis of the operation is described in detail below.
Mode 1 (t0t < t1; in Figure 4a): When the switch voltage vDS1 decreases to zero and the body diode of switch S1 is forward-biased at time interval t0, this mode begins and the power switch S1 turns on with zero-voltage switching (ZVS). The voltage source VREC1 charges the coupled inductor LB1 through diode DB1 and switch S1. The inductor current iLB1 increases linearly from zero and can be given by:
i L B 1 ( t ) = | 2 v A C r m s sin ( 2 π f A C t ) | 2 L B 1 ( t t 0 )
where vAC-rms represents the rms value of input utility-line voltage, and fAC represents the utility-line frequency.
The resonant inductor Lr and magnetizing inductor Lm provide energy to the resonant capacitor Cr and to DC-linked capacitor CDC through the body diode of switch S1, and to the output capacitor Co and the LED streetlight module through transformer T and output diode D1. The diode DB3 is forward-biased, and the coupled inductors LB3 and LB4 provide energy to the drain-source capacitor of switch S2 through diode DB3. This mode ends when the resonant inductor current iLr is zero at time t1.
Mode 2 (t1t < t2; in Figure 4b): This mode is activated when the resonant inductor current iLr reaches zero at t1. The voltage source VREC1 continues charging the coupled inductor LB1 through diode DB1 and switch S1.
The capacitors CDC, the magnetizing inductor Lm and the coupled inductors LB3 and LB4 provide energy to the drain-source capacitor of switch S2, the resonant inductor Lr and the resonant capacitor Cr through DB3, and to the output capacitor Co and the LED streetlight module through transformer T and output diode D1. When the magnetizing inductor current iLm and inductor current iLB4 become zero at t2, this mode finishes.
Mode 3 (t2t < t3; in Figure 4c): At t2, the voltage source VREC1 continues charging the coupled inductor LB1 through DB1 and S1. The capacitors CDC provides energy to the resonant inductor Lr, the resonant capacitor Cr, and the magnetizing inductor Lm through S1, and to the output capacitor Co and the LED streetlight module through transformer T and output diode D1. This mode ends when the diode current iD1 becomes zero at t3.
Mode 4 (t3t < t4; in Figure 4d): This mode activates when iD1 is zero at t3. The voltage source VREC1 continues charging the coupled inductor LB1 through DB1 and S1. The capacitor CDC continues providing energy to the inductors Lr and Lm and to Cr through S1. The output capacitor Co provides energy to the LED streetlight module. The coupled-inductor current iLB1 reaches its peak value at t4, which is denoted as iLB1-pk(t), and is given by:
i L B 1 p k ( t ) = | 2 v A C r m s sin ( 2 π f A C t ) | 2 L B 1 D T S
where TS and D are the period and the duty cycle of the power switch, respectively.
When switch S1 turns off at t4, this mode finishes.
Mode 5 (t4t < t5; in Figure 4e): This mode begins when S1 is off and iLB1 is at its maximum level at t4. The diode DB2 is forward-biased and coupled inductors LB1 and LB2 provide energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through DB2. The coupled-inductor current iLB1 linearly decreases, and it can be given by:
i L B 1 ( t ) = V D C 4 L B 1 ( t t 4 )
where VDC represents the voltage of the DC-bus capacitor.
The capacitor CDC and the drain-source capacitor of S2, provide energy to inductors Lr and Lm and to Cr. The output capacitor Co continues providing energy to the LED streetlight module. At time interval t5, the voltage vDS2 of power switch S2 is decreased to zero; then this mode ends.
Mode 6 (t5t < t6; in Figure 4f): When the switch voltage vDS2 is decreased to zero and the body diode of switch S2 is forward-biased at t5, this mode activates and the power switch S2 turns on with ZVS feature. The voltage source VREC2 provides energy to coupled inductor LB4 through diode DB4 and switch S2, and the inductor current iLB4 increases linearly from zero. The coupled inductors LB1 and LB2 continue providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through DB2, and the inductor current iLB1 continues linearly decreasing. The capacitor CDC continues providing energy to inductors Lr and Lm and to the resonant capacitor Cr through the body diode of S2. The output capacitor Co continues providing energy to the LED streetlight module. This mode finishes when the magnetizing inductor current iLm reaches its peak value at t6.
Mode 7 (t6t < t7; in Figure 4g): This mode begins when the magnetizing inductor current iLm is at its maximum level at t6. The voltage source VREC2 continues providing energy to coupled inductor LB4 through diode DB4 and switch S2, and iLB4 continues linearly increasing. The coupled inductors LB1 and LB2 continue providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through DB2, and iLB1 continues linearly decreasing. The DC-linked capacitor CDC provides energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through S2. The resonant inductor Lr provides energy to resonant capacitor Cr through switch S2. The magnetizing inductor Lm provides energy to the output capacitor Co and the LED streetlight module through transformer T and diode D2. This mode ends when the inductor current iLB1 is decreased to zero at t7.
Mode 8 (t7t < t8; in Figure 4h): This mode activates when the current iLB1 is zero at t7. The voltage source VREC2 continues providing energy to coupled inductor LB4 through diode DB4 and switch S2. The coupled inductors LB1 and LB2 continue providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through DB2. The DC-linked capacitor CDC continues providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through S2. The resonant inductor Lr and the magnetizing inductor Lm provide energy to resonant capacitor Cr through switch S2 and to the output capacitor Co along with the LED streetlight module through transformer T and diode D2. This mode finishes when the magnetizing inductor current iLm is decreased to zero at t8.
Mode 9 (t8t < t9; in Figure 4i): This mode begins when the magnetizing inductor current iLm is zero at t8. The voltage source VREC2 continues providing energy to coupled inductor LB4 through diode DB4 and switch S2, and iLB4 continues linearly increasing. The DC-linked capacitor CDC continues providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through S2. The inductors Lr and Lm continue providing energy to the capacitor Cr through switch S2, and to the output capacitor Co along with the LED streetlight module through transformer T and diode D2. When the diode current iD2 decreases to zero, this mode ends.
Mode 10 (t9t < t10; in Figure 4j): This mode activates when the current iD2 is zero at t9. The voltage source VREC2 continues providing energy to the coupled inductor LB4 through DB4 and S2, and iLB4 continues increasing linearly. The DC-linked capacitor CDC continues providing energy to the drain-source capacitor of S1 through S2. The inductors Lr and Lm continue providing energy to the capacitor Cr through switch S2. The output capacitor Co supplies energy to the LED streetlight module. When S2 turns off and iLB4 reaches its peak value at t10, this mode finishes.
Mode 11 (t10t < t11; in Figure 4k): This mode begins when switch S2 is turned off and iLB4 is at its maximum level at t10. The coupled inductors LB3 and LB4 provide energy to the drain-source capacitor of S2 through DB3, and the inductor current iLB4 linearly decreases. The drain-source capacitor of S1 and the inductors Lr and Lm supply energy to capacitors Cr and CDC. The output capacitor Co still provides energy to the LED streetlight module. When the switch voltage vDS1 decreases to zero at t11, this mode ends, and Mode 1 begins again for the next switching period.

3. Design Considerations in the Presented LED Streetlight Driver

3.1. Design of Coupled Inductors LB1, LB2, LB3 and LB4

Referring to Figure 3, the rectified voltages VREC1 and VREC2 are theoretically equal due to the same capacitance of capacitors Cin1 and Cin2, and they can be expressed by
V R E C 1 ( t ) = V R E C 2 ( t ) = 2 v A C r m s | sin ( 2 π f A C t ) | 2
The switching frequency fs is much larger than the line frequency fAC; thus, rectified voltages VREC1 and VREC2 could be regarded as a constant value during one switching period. Referring to Figure 2b, the peak level of diode currents iDB1 and iDB4 can be represented by
i D B 1 , p k ( t ) = i D B 4 , p k ( t ) = 2 v A C r m s | sin ( 2 π f A C t ) | D u t y 2 L B f s
where LB represents the inductance of coupled inductors LB1, LB2, LB3 and LB4, and Duty is the duty cycle of the switches S1 and S2.
The peak level of the rectified input current irec, denoted as irec,pk, can be represented by
i r e c , p k ( t ) = i D B 1 , p k ( t ) + i D B 4 , p k ( t ) = 2 v A C r m s | sin ( 2 π f A C t ) | D u t y L B f s
By filtering the high-frequency components of irec,pk(t), the input current iAC is equal to the average level of irec,pk(t) during one switching period and can be expressed as
i A C ( t ) = 1 T A C 0 T A C i r e c , p k ( t ) d t = 2 v A C r m s D u t y 2 ( sin ( 2 π f A C t ) ) 2 L B f s
where TAC is the utility-line period.
The average value of input utility-line power Pin is obtained by:
P i n = 1 T A C 0 T A C v A C ( t ) i A C ( t ) d t = v A C r m s 2 D u t y 2 4 L B f s
The rated output power Po of the LED street-lighting module is related with input power Pin and is given by
P o = η P i n
where η is the estimated efficiency of the LED driver.
From (8) and (9), the design equation of the inductance LB of coupled inductors is given by
L B = η v A C r m s 2 D u t y 2 4 P o f S
With a η of 0.85, a Duty of 0.5, a Po of 144 W, a switching frequency fS of 100 kHz, and a vAC-rms of 220 V, the inductance LB of coupled inductors is given by
L B = 0.85 220 2 0.5 2 4 144 100 k = 178.6 μ H

3.2. Determining the Transformer Turns-Ratio n

The turns-ratio n of transformer T is given as
n = n p n s D 2 v A C r m s V o + V F
where VF is the forward voltage drop of the output-rectifier diodes D1 and D2; and Vo is the output voltage.
With a Vo of 36 V and a VF of 0.7 V, the turns-ratio n is given by
n = n p n s 0.5 2 220 36 + 0.7 = 4.3
The turns-ratio n is selected as 5.

3.3. Determining the LLC Resonant Network

The quality factor Qr is defined as
Q r = L r R a C r
where Req is the equivalent output resistor referring to the primary side of transformer T, and which can be expressed by the following equation:
R e q = 8 n 2 V o π 2 I o
The main resonant frequency ωr1 and secondary resonant frequency ωr2 of the LLC resonant network are respectively defined as
ω r 1 = 2 π f r 1 = 1 L r C r
ω r 2 = 2 π f r 2 = 1 ( L m + L r ) C r
The inductance ratio A is defined as
A = L m L r
In addition, substituting (16) into (14) and (15), the secondary resonant frequency fr2 is given by
f r 2 = f r 1 2 A + 1
With an fr1 of 120 kHz and an A of 5, the secondary resonant frequency fr2 is computed by
f r 2 = ( 120 k ) 2 5 + 1 49 k H z
Dividing (12) by (14), the resonant inductor Lr can be expressed by
L r = Q r R e q 2 π f r 1
The resonant capacitor Cr can be obtained by
C r = 1 ( 2 π f r 1 ) 2 L r
With an fr1 of 120 kHz, an Req of 182.4Ω, an A of 5 and a Qr of 0.4, the resonant inductor Lr is given by
L r = Q r R e q 2 π f r 1 = 0.4 182.4 2 π 120 k = 96.8 μ H
In addition, the inductor Lr is selected as 90 μH, and the magnetic inductor Lm is selected as 450μH according to (16).
The resonant capacitor is given by
C r = 1 ( 2 π f r 1 ) 2 L r = 1 ( 2 π 120 k ) 2 90 μ = 19.5 n F
Additionally, the resonant capacitor Cr is selected as 22 nF.

3.4. Design Guidelines of Achieving Soft-Switching in the Proposed LED Streetlight Driver

By using the fundamental approximation method, the voltage gain |MV| of the LLC resonant network is given by [18]:
| M V ( 2 π f S ) | = n 4 V O π sin 2 π f S t 2 π V D C sin 2 π f S t = 2 n V o V D C 2 n V o 2 v A C r m s = | A ( f S f r 1 ) 2 [ ( A + 1 ) ( f S f r 1 ) 2 1 ] + j Q r A ( f S f r 1 ) [ ( f S f r 1 ) 2 1 ] |
In this design procedure of the proposed LED streetlight driver, the main resonant frequency fr1, the inductance ratio A, and quality factor Qr are selected to be 120 kHz, 5, and 0.4, respectively. According to (20), Figure 6 shows the relationship between voltage gain |MV| and switching frequency fS under different quality factor Qr. In addition, the right-hand side and left-hand side of the pink line (which is the constraint line for achieving soft-switching) are inductive region and capacitive region, respectively. To achieve soft-switching for reducing power losses in the proposed LED streetlight driver, the LLC resonant network inside the driver is recommended to be operated at inductive region. Moreover, with a turns-ratio n of 5, an output voltage VO of 36V and a rated input utility-line voltage vAC-rms of 220V, the rated voltage gain MV-rated is obtained by
M V r a t e d = 2 n V O 2 v A C r m s = 2 5 36 2 220 = 1.16
In addition, the switching frequency fS is designed at 100 kHz under a rated voltage gain MV-rated of 1.16. If the rated input utility-line voltage has some variations (for example, 10V), the required maximum voltage gain MV-max occurred at minimum input voltage and the required minimum voltage gain MV-min occurred at maximum input voltage are respectively calculated by
M V max = 2 n V O 2 v A C min = 2 5 36 2 ( 220 10 ) = 1.21
M V min = 2 n V O 2 v A C max = 2 5 36 2 ( 220 + 10 ) = 1.11
Please see Figure 6, by using variable frequency control scheme, the switching frequencies under required maximum and minimum voltage gains (MV-max and MV-min) are adjusted to be 90 kHz and 110 kHz due to variations of input utility-line voltage, respectively. Furthermore, these switching frequencies are located at the right-hand side of the pink line. As a result, soft-switching features are also achieved when the rated input utility-line voltage has variations of 10 V.

4. Experimental Results of the Prototype LED Streetlight Driver

A prototype driver has been successfully developed and implemented for supplying a 144 W-rated (36V/4A) LED streetlight module with an input utility-line voltage of 220 V. Table 1 and Table 2, respectively, show the specifications and key components utilized in the presented single-stage LED streetlight driver. Additionally, Figure 7 shows the proposed LED streetlight driver with control block diagram. A constant-voltage and constant-current (CV-CC) controller is adopted to sense the output voltage through resistors RVS1 and RVS2, while simultaneously sensing the output current through the resistor RCS for supplying the rated voltage and current to the experimental LED street-lighting module. The output signal of the CV-CC controller feeds into the high-voltage resonant controller through a photo-coupler. Two gate-driving signals vgs1 and vgs2 generating from the resonant controller regulate the output voltage and current of the LED street-lighting module by utilizing variable-frequency control scheme. Moreover, the coupled-inductors (LB1, LB2, LB3 and LB4) are designed to be operated at discontinuous conduction mode (DCM) for naturally achieving input-current shaping without utilizing a power-factor-correction controller with a feed-forward controlling path.
The measured waveforms of coupled-inductor currents iLB1 and iLB4 are shown in Figure 8; both have interleaved features and operate in DCM. Figure 9 shows the measured switch voltage vDS2 and switch current iDS2; thus, ZVS has occurred on the power switch for lowering switching losses. Figure 10 presents the measured switch voltage vDS2 and resonant inductor current iLr. Figure 11 presents the measured switch voltage vDS2 and current iD2 of the output rectified diode D2; thus, ZCS has occurred on the power diode for decreasing the conduction losses. Figure 12 depicts the measured output voltage VO and current IO; their average values are approximately 36 V and 4 A, respectively.
The measured waveforms of input utility-line voltage vAC and current iAC are shown in Figure 13, and the input current is in phase with utility-line voltage, which results in high power factor. In addition, the measured power factor and the circuit efficiency are 0.9684 and 89.69%, respectively, as measured by a power analyzer (Tektronix PA 4000). Figure 14 shows the measured input utility-line current harmonics at an input utility-line voltage of 220 V in comparison with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 61000-3-2 Class C standards; all utility-line current harmonics meet the requirements.
Table 3 shows the measured output voltage ripple and current ripple of the presented LED streetlight driver at a utility-line voltage of 220 V; additionally, the output voltage (current) ripple factor is obtained by the peak-to-peak level divided by the mean value of output voltage (current). It can be seen that the measured voltage and current ripple factors are smaller than 5% and 2%, respectively. Figure 15 presents a photo of supplying the LED streetlight module with the proposed streetlight driver at an input utility-line voltage of 220V. In addition, Table 4 shows comparisons between the existing single-stage LED streetlight driver in references [16,17,18,19] and the one proposed in this paper. According to this table, the proposed single-stage LED streetlight driver has a beneficial feature of reduced voltage stress of power switches, which is favorable for operating with high utility-line voltages, in comparison to the existing single-stage versions in the references [16,17,18,19]. In addition, the proposed circuit has the lowest current ripple factor among these LED streetlight drivers.

5. Conclusions

This paper has presented and implemented a single-stage LED streetlight driver with soft-switching and PFC features; the proposed circuit integrates an interleaved buck-boost converter with coupled inductors and a half-bridge LLC resonant converter into a single power-conversion stage, and is suitable for operating at high utility-line voltages with reduced voltage stress on the DC-linked capacitor. A 144 W prototype LED driver has been developed and tested with an input utility-line voltage of 220 V. The experimental results of the presented LED streetlight driver display low output-voltage ripple factor (< 5%), low output-current ripple factor (< 2%), high power factor (> 0.97), ZVS on power switches, ZCS on output rectified diodes, and high circuit efficiency (approximately 90%); thus the functionality of the presented LED streetlight driver is validated.

Author Contributions

C.-A.C. and C.-H.C. conceived and designed the circuit. H.-L.C. and E.-C.C. performed circuit simulations. T.-Y.C. and M.-T.C. carried out the prototype driver, and measured as well as analyzed experimental results with the guidance from C.-A.C. E.-C.C. revised the manuscript for submission.

Funding

This research was funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan, R.O.C., under its grant with reference number MOST 105-2221-E-214-028.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to convey their appreciation for grant support from the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan, R.O.C., under its grant with reference number MOST 105-2221-E-214-028.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. The existing single-stage LED streetlight driver.
Figure 1. The existing single-stage LED streetlight driver.
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Figure 2. (a) Original two-stage LED streetlight driver; (b) the presented single-stage LED streetlight driver with coupled inductors and interleaved PFC feature.
Figure 2. (a) Original two-stage LED streetlight driver; (b) the presented single-stage LED streetlight driver with coupled inductors and interleaved PFC feature.
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Figure 3. The simplified circuit of the presented single-stage LED driver for streetlight applications.
Figure 3. The simplified circuit of the presented single-stage LED driver for streetlight applications.
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Figure 4. Operation modes of the presented LED driver. (a) Mode 1; (b) Mode 2; (c) Mode 3; (d) Mode 4; (e) Mode 5; (f) Mode 6; (g) Mode 7; (h) Mode 8; (i) Mode 9; (j) Mode 10; (k) Mode 11.
Figure 4. Operation modes of the presented LED driver. (a) Mode 1; (b) Mode 2; (c) Mode 3; (d) Mode 4; (e) Mode 5; (f) Mode 6; (g) Mode 7; (h) Mode 8; (i) Mode 9; (j) Mode 10; (k) Mode 11.
Electronics 08 00911 g004aElectronics 08 00911 g004bElectronics 08 00911 g004c
Figure 5. Key waveforms of the presented LED driver for streetlight applications.
Figure 5. Key waveforms of the presented LED driver for streetlight applications.
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Figure 6. Relationship between the voltage gain MV of LLC resonant tank and the switching frequency fS.
Figure 6. Relationship between the voltage gain MV of LLC resonant tank and the switching frequency fS.
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Figure 7. The proposed LED streetlight driver with control block diagram.
Figure 7. The proposed LED streetlight driver with control block diagram.
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Figure 8. Measured currents iLB1 (2 A/div) and iLB4 (2 A/div) of the coupled inductors; time scale: 2 μs/div.
Figure 8. Measured currents iLB1 (2 A/div) and iLB4 (2 A/div) of the coupled inductors; time scale: 2 μs/div.
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Figure 9. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iDS2 (2 A/div); time scale: 2 μs/div.
Figure 9. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iDS2 (2 A/div); time scale: 2 μs/div.
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Figure 10. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iLr (2 A/div); time scale: 2 μs/div.
Figure 10. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iLr (2 A/div); time scale: 2 μs/div.
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Figure 11. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iD2 (2 A/div) of the output rectified diode D4; time scale: 2 μs/div.
Figure 11. Measured switch voltage vDS2 (200 V/div) and current iD2 (2 A/div) of the output rectified diode D4; time scale: 2 μs/div.
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Figure 12. Measured output voltage VO (20 V/div) and current IO (5 A/div); time scale: 5ms /div.
Figure 12. Measured output voltage VO (20 V/div) and current IO (5 A/div); time scale: 5ms /div.
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Figure 13. Measured input utility-line voltage vAC (200 V/div) and current iAC (2 A/div); time scale: 5 ms/div.
Figure 13. Measured input utility-line voltage vAC (200 V/div) and current iAC (2 A/div); time scale: 5 ms/div.
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Figure 14. Measured input current harmonics compared with the IEC 61000-3-2 Class C standards.
Figure 14. Measured input current harmonics compared with the IEC 61000-3-2 Class C standards.
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Figure 15. Photo of supplying the LED streetlight module with the proposed streetlight driver at a input utility-line voltage of 220V.
Figure 15. Photo of supplying the LED streetlight module with the proposed streetlight driver at a input utility-line voltage of 220V.
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Table 1. Specifications of the presented singles-stage LED streetlight driver.
Table 1. Specifications of the presented singles-stage LED streetlight driver.
ParameterValue
Input Utility-Line Voltage vAC220 V (rms)
Output Rated Power PO144 W
Output Rated Voltage VO36 V
Output Rated Current IO4 A
Table 2. Key components utilized in the presented LED streetlight driver.
Table 2. Key components utilized in the presented LED streetlight driver.
ComponentValue
Capacitors Cin1, Cin2330 nF
Inductors LB1, LB2, LB3, LB4179 μH
Diodes DB1, DB2, DB3, DB4MUR460
Power Switches S1, S2STP20NM60
DC-Linked Capacitor CDC220 μF/450 V
Magnetizing Inductor Lm450 μH
Resonant Inductor Lr90 μH
Resonant Capacitor Cr22 nF
Diodes D1, D2MBR30H100CT
Output Capacitor Co2200 μF/63 V
Filter Inductor Lf2.5 mH
Filter Capacitor Cf1 μF
Table 3. Measured output voltage ripple and current ripple of the presented LED streetlight driver at a utility line voltage of 220V.
Table 3. Measured output voltage ripple and current ripple of the presented LED streetlight driver at a utility line voltage of 220V.
ParameterValue
Mean Value of Output Voltage VO35.85 V
Peak-to-Peak Value of Output Voltage VO1.53 V
Voltage Ripple Factor4.28 %
Mean Value of Output Current IO3.95 A
Peak-to-Peak Value of Output Current IO48.9 mA
Current Ripple Factor1.24 %
Table 4. Comparisons between the existing single-stage LED streetlight driver in [16,17,18,19], and the version proposed in this paper.
Table 4. Comparisons between the existing single-stage LED streetlight driver in [16,17,18,19], and the version proposed in this paper.
ItemPresented Driver in Reference [16]Presented Driver in Reference [17]Presented Driver in Reference [18]Presented Driver in Reference [19]Proposed Driver
Circuit TopologyIntegration of interleaved boost PFC converter and LLC resonant converter Integration of dual buck-boost converter with coupled inductors and LLC resonant converterIntegration of modified bridgeless boost PFC converter and LLC resonant converterIntegration of dual boost converter with coupled inductors and LLC resonant converterIntegration of interleaved buck-boost converter with coupled inductors and LLC resonant converter
Number of Required Power Switches22222
Number of Required Diodes864410
Number of Required Capacitors6
(Including one DC-bus capacitor)
5
(Including two DC-bus capacitors)
4
(Including one DC-bus capacitor)
4
(Including one DC-bus capacitor)
6
(Including one DC-bus capacitor)
Number of Required Magnetic Components54445
Input Utility-Line Voltage110V110V110V110V220V
Output Power144W (36V/4A)144W (36V/4A)144W (36V/4A)144W (36V/4A)144W (36V/4A)
Voltage Stress of Power Switches 1 1 D 2 v A C r m s 2 D 1 D 2 v A C r m s 1 1 D 2 v A C r m s 1 1 D 2 v A C r m s D 1 D 2 v A C r m s
Voltage Ripple Factor< 6%< 7%< 8%< 4%< 5%
Current Ripple Factor< 10%< 5%< 13%< 4%< 2%
Measured Power Factor> 0.99> 0.99> 0.99> 0.98> 0.97
Measured Circuit Efficiency> 88 %> 90%> 92%> 92%≒ 90%

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MDPI and ACS Style

Cheng, C.-A.; Chang, C.-H.; Cheng, H.-L.; Chang, E.-C.; Chung, T.-Y.; Chang, M.-T. A Single-Stage LED Streetlight Driver with Soft-Switching and Interleaved PFC Features. Electronics 2019, 8, 911. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8080911

AMA Style

Cheng C-A, Chang C-H, Cheng H-L, Chang E-C, Chung T-Y, Chang M-T. A Single-Stage LED Streetlight Driver with Soft-Switching and Interleaved PFC Features. Electronics. 2019; 8(8):911. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8080911

Chicago/Turabian Style

Cheng, Chun-An, Chien-Hsuan Chang, Hung-Liang Cheng, En-Chih Chang, Tsung-Yuan Chung, and Man-Tang Chang. 2019. "A Single-Stage LED Streetlight Driver with Soft-Switching and Interleaved PFC Features" Electronics 8, no. 8: 911. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8080911

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