Electronic – 300W Boost converter design

designinductorswitch-mode-power-supply

I am designing a boost converter. I know maybe the specs I want would suit better in another topology like Half-Bridge or Full-Bridge but the boost topology is simpler and inductor winding is simpler too I think.

My boost converter should be:

  • 14V input voltage
  • 15 to 30V output voltage
  • 10A output current so the output power will be 30*10 = 300W
  • 300KHz switching frequency

I am using this application note from Texas Instruments and I am getting this results:

  • Inductor value: 2.5uH
  • Max switch current: 45A

Is it possible inductor has such a low value? Is the peak current really that high? I am planning to use an IRFZ44 MOSFET that specifies a Pulsed Drain Current of 200A, is that the parameter I have to look at or should I calculate Irms and look at Continuous Drain Current?

Also I was looking at this core but the Al value is so big I doesn't event need a turn around the core to get 2.5uH! So I can't use this core?

Also I would like to know how to calculate the inductor to ensure I am not exceeding the Maximum Flux Density. I have a book called Power Supply Cookbook but it seems to focus more on Half-Bridge and Full-Bridge inductor design than Boost design.

I am not an expert so there are a lot of things I don't know any guidance, book, links would be really appreciated! Thanks!

Best Answer

Power out = power in minus losses. Power out is 300 watts therefore power in will be about 330 watts. At 14 volts and 330 watts, current in will be 23.6 amps but this is average current. The peak current will depend on the duty cycle and looking at it simplistically, for a 50% duty cycle the peak current might be about 2 x 23.6 amps = 47 amps worst case (borderline discontinuous).

Ideally you need to pick an inductor that doesn't saturate and one with a gap is going to work better. A solid ferrite core will tend to start saturating at a flux density of about 0.4 teslas. It might have a relative permeability of (say) 1000. Using B = \$\mu H\$ allows this to be estimated: -

H = \$\dfrac{0.4}{4\pi \times 10^{-7} \times 1000}\$ = 318 A.t/m

You need to know the mean length of the magnetic field and that is found in the data sheet for the ferrite you are using. Let's say it is 100mm, this means your maximum ampere-turns is 31.8 and of course this would be unsuitable for your application because you can immediately see that it is likely your amperage and one turn is going to heavily saturate the core.

So, if you put a gap in it might reduce the effective permeability to (say) 200 and this allows more 5x H field (5x more current or 5x more turns) but inductance is related to turns squared so there is a net gain because although the \$A_L\$ value for the gapped core has gone down by a factor of 5 you only need \$\sqrt5\$ more turns to recover the inductance.