NSC AN-2116

National Semiconductor
Application Note 2116
Perry Tsao
May 4, 2011
Introduction
lifetime. This line of products includes MOSFET gate drives,
PWM controllers with integrated switches, LDO regulators,
amplifiers, and many other ICs necessary for photovoltaic
electronics. All of the ICs recommended in this article are being made available as Renewable Energy Grade components.
Microinverters are a growing and rapidly evolving part of the
photovoltaic (PV) system. Modern microinverters are designed to convert the DC power from one PV module (solar
panel) to the AC grid, and are designed for a max output
power in the range of 180W to 300W. Compared to conventional string or central inverters, microinverters have advantages in ease of installation, localized max power point
tracking, and redundancy that provides robustness to failure.
Since this area of power electronics is seeing such rapid innovation, there are many different topologies and variations
being developed. This article explores some of the prevalent
topologies used in microinverters today, and the use of SolarMagic™ ICs in these demanding applications. In particular,
the use of the SM72295 Photovoltaic Full-Bridge Driver will
be highlighted.
SolarMagic Renewable Energy
Grade Components
The environment for electronics in PV systems is a very demanding one due to the extremes in temperatures and requirements for long-lifetime. The ambient temperature behind
a photovoltaic module can range from below freezing in the
winter to over 90°C on a summer day. With this in mind National Semiconductor created the Renewable Energy Grade
line of SolarMagic ICs that are all rated for operation from -40°
C to +125°C and have all been screened and tested to standards appropriate for products that are designed for a 25 year
Single-Stage Microinverters
There have been a multitude of microinverter topologies developed [1], and these topologies can be broken up into two
broad categories. The first category depicted in the block diagram of Figure 1 employs a DC/DC converter and controls
the converter output voltage to have the shape of a rectified
sinusoid. This rectified sinusoid waveform is then inverted into
a full sinusoidal waveform using an “unfolding bridge” that interfaces to the grid voltage. Though perhaps not the most
accurate name, this category of microinverter topologies is
often referred to as a “single-stage microinverter” because the
boosting of the panel voltage and shaping of the AC waveform
is accomplished in a single stage.
A more formal categorization of microinverter topologies [2]
refers to this as a PV-side decoupled topology because the
input capacitors decouple the AC power variation. The most
widespread topology of this category is a quasi-resonant interleaved flyback, however, there are other variants such as
interleaved flyback (not quasi-resonant) and interleaved forward converter. The unfolding inverter is generally implemented with 4 SCR’s (silicon controlled rectifiers) that switch
at the grid frequency.
SolarMagic ICs in Microinverters Applications
SolarMagic™ ICs in
Microinverter Applications
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FIGURE 1. Block diagram of a microinverter using a single-stage topology. The DC/DC stage can be implemented as
a quasi-resonant interleaved flyback or another topology.
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© 2011 National Semiconductor Corporation
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FIGURE 2. Simplified schematic of a quasi-resonant interleaved flyback using the SM72295. Current sensing is
implemented with high-side current sense resistors, and output overvoltage shutdown is implemented using voltage
sense windings and the OVS pin.
Figure 2 depicts a simplified schematic of a single-stage microinverter using a quasi-resonant interleaved flyback for the
DC-DC stage. In the quasi-resonant interleaved flyback, the
SM72295 provides the microinverter designer with a high level of integration and enables maximized power density, reduced component count, and reduced PCB space. The
SM72295 combines four independent 3A MOSFET gate
drives with signal conditioning, power good, and overvoltage
sensing functionality. Gate drive signal inputs are compatible
with both 3.3V and 5V logic.
The integrated signal conditioning provides two channels optimized for using high-side current sense resistors with common-mode voltages up to 100V. A transconductance amplifier provides gain and is followed by a low-impedance buffer
suitable for interfacing into an analog to digital converter
(ADC). The use of current sense resistors is a lower cost alternative to commonly used current-sense transformers. In
addition, the ability to put the current sense resistors on the
high-side (positive voltage) current path as opposed to the
low-side (ground) current return path can ease layout because it does not require segmenting the ground plane and
also eliminates the need for a negative rail voltage in cases
where the sense resistor voltages goes below ground.
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The advantages of the single-stage topology microinverters
are their lower component count, low switching frequencies
of the unfolding bridge, and ease of implementing isolation.
Disadvantages include high voltage ratings on both the primary side switches and the secondary side diode, and high
amplitude 120Hz ripple current at the input. This input ripple
current must be controlled to maintain an acceptable efficiency level due to the nature of the photovoltaic module.
A photovoltaic module has a load curve with a specific maximum power point Pmp that occurs when its output voltage
equals Vmp and output current equals Imp. To maximize energy harvest, the microinverter maintains the module output
voltage and current as closely as possible to Vmp and Imp using
a max power point tracking algorithm. Deviations from Vmp or
Imp, such as those caused by input ripple current, would cause
power loss. Therefore the input ripple current of the singlestage inverters must be reduced to minimize the power loss,
and this necessitates large capacitors at the input of the microinverter. For practical cost and size purposes these capacitors can only be implemented with electrolytic capacitors.
2
The second category of microinverter topologies depicted in
the block diagram of Figure 3 employ an intermediate high
voltage DC-bus. These topologies use a DC/DC converter
with a high boost ratio to boost from the PV module voltage
to the intermediate DC-bus voltage, and then use a conventional PWM controlled MOSFET or IGBT full-bridge to invert
the waveform to the grid. This type of microinverter is also
referred to as a DC-link topology [2].
There are many different options being implemented for the
DC/DC stage in the designs being developed today. Possibilities include:
1. Interleaved flyback
2. Push-pull converter (current-fed or voltage-fed, with
passive or active clamp)
3. Full-bridge converter (voltage-fed, current-fed, or
resonant)
From a high-level perspective, all of these topologies are
more complex and costly than the single-stage microinverter
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FIGURE 3. Block Diagram Of Two-Stage Inverter With A DC Bus.
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due to the additional high-frequency switching components.
At first it may not be obvious why these topologies are being
developed. However, for applications in microinverters,
there’s an overriding focus on maximizing reliability, which
puts emphasis on choosing a topology that enables the selection of the highest reliability components. All of the these
topologies have much lower input ripple current at the PV input side, and therefore use lower capacitance values that
make it practical to use higher reliability film capacitors in the
place of electrolytic capacitors.
Another benefit of the two-stage topologies is that it makes it
possible to provide reactive power to the grid, whereas it is
not possible with single-stage inverters with an SCR unfolding
bridge. The ability to provide reactive power is a highly desirable feature for some commercial installations, and it is already a requirement for larger photovoltaic installations in
some countries.
Two-Stage Microinverters
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FIGURE 4. Simplified schematic of a two stage microinverter using the SM72295. The DC/DC stage is implemented as a
voltage-fed full-bridge converter, and the DC/AC stage is implemented as a MOSFET Full-bridge.
Shown in Figure 4 is a simplified schematic of a two-stage
microinverter implemented with a voltage-fed full-bridge for
the DC/DC stage and a MOSFET full-bridge for the DC/AC
stage. In this application, the SM72295 provides gate drives
for the four primary side MOSFETs. The SM72295 is ideally
suited as a gate driver in many of these two-stage topologies,
several of which use a MOSFET full-bridge on their primary
side.
As shown in Figure 4, the SM72295 is capable of driving all
4 MOSFETs in the primary side full-bridge. It provides 2 highside and 2 low-side gate drives, integrated bootstrap diodes,
and is suitable for input voltages up to 100V. The additional
integration of signal conditioning, undervoltage lockout, and
overvoltage shutdown further reduce part count and conserve
valuable PCB real-estate.
Conclusion
Microinverters are an exciting and growing application area
for power electronics. This article gave a brief overview of
some of the topologies being used in microinverters today,
and described the SM72295 Photovoltaic Full-bridge Driver
which integrates the key functions of MOSFET gate drives,
signal conditioning, under-voltage lockout, and overvoltage
shutdown. The SM72295 and other SolarMagic ICs support
the most prevalent topologies used in microinverters today,
and help microinverter designers maximize reliability, minimize complexity, minimize size, and minimize cost.
References
[1] B. Burger, B. Goeldi, S. Rogalla, H. Schmidt. “Module integrated electronics – an overview” 25th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition. 6-10 Sept.
2010. pp. 3700 – 3707.
[2] Haibing Hu; Harb, S.; Kutkut, N.; Batarseh, I.; Shen, Z.J.
“Power decoupling techniques for micro-inverters in PV systems-a review” Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition
(ECCE), 2010. pp. 3235 – 3240.
Housekeeping Power and Other
Applications
In addition to the SM72295, there is a broad range of SolarMagic ICs suitable for application in other areas of the microinverter. As shown in Figure 5 and Table 1, this includes
temperature sensors, voltage references, precision amplifiers
for current and voltage sensing, and switchers and LDOs for
housekeeping power. These ICs have application in both single-stage and two-stage microinverters of all topologies.
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FIGURE 5. Block Diagram Of SolarMagic Ics In A Microinverter Application
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TABLE 1.
Gate Drives
Description
SM72295
Photovoltaic Full-Bridge Driver
SM72482
Dual 5A Compound Gate Driver
SM74101
Tiny 7A MOSFET Gate Driver (LLP-6 package)
SM74104
High Voltage Half-Bridge Gate Driver with Adaptive Delay
High Voltage Switching Regulators with
Description
Integrated Switch
SM72485
100V, 150mA Step-Down (Buck) Converter
SM74301
100V, 350 mA Constant On-Time Buck Switching Regulator
SM74304
80V, 500mA Step Down Swithching Regulator
Low Dropout Voltage Regulators
Description
SM74501
50mA Low Dropout Voltage Regulator (3.3V, 5.0V), max Vin 40V
SM72238
100mA Low Dropout Voltage Regulator (3.3V, 5.0V), max Vin 30V
SM74503
800mA Low-Dropout Regulator (3.3V, 5.0V), max Vin 15V
Amplifiers for current sensing, voltage
sensing, and buffering
Description
SM72501
Precision, CMOS Input, Rail-to-Rail Input Output, Wide Supply Range Amplifier
SM73301
Rail-to-Rail Input Output, High Output Current & Unlimited Cap Load Op Amp
SM73302
88 MHz, Precision, Low Noise, 1.8V CMOS Input, Op Amp
SM73303
5 MHz, Low Noise, Rail-to-Rail Output, Dual Operational Amplifier with CMOS Input
SM73304
Dual 17 MHz, Low Noise, CMOS Input Amplifier
SM73305
17 MHz, Low Noise, CMOS Input Amplifier
SM73306
Dual CMOS Rail to Rail Input and Output Operational Amplifier
Comparators
Description
SM72375
Dual Micro-Power CMOS Comparator
SM73402
Low Power Low Offset Quad Comparators
SM73403
Single General Purpose Voltage Comparator
Reset and Supervisory
Description
SM72240
5-Pin Microprocessor Reset Circuit (3.08V, 4.63V thresholds)
SM74601
Precision Micropower Series Voltage Reference (2.5V)
Thermostats and Temperature Sensors
Description
SM72480
125°C, 120°C, and 105°C Thermostat
SM73710
±4°C Accurate, Temperature Sensor
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SolarMagic ICs in Microinverters Applications
Notes
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