Abstract

A new topological structure is proposed in this article for the traditional single-phase full-bridge inverter circuit by adding an auxiliary synchronizing resonant circuit. Without extra switching transistors, the complexity of the control circuit is simplified while enabling zero voltage switching (ZVS) functionality. The significance of this proposed topology is that the switching transistors of all bridge arms are sharing one common synchronizing unit which is constructed with an absorbing inductor and capacitor. In this way, the added-on components can be substantially reduced for the main switching transistor circuit. By utilizing a big-volume capacitor as the constant voltage source, the sourceless energy feedback unit can minimize the switching losses. In the meantime, the proportional-resonant feedback circuit can modify the sinusoidal pulse width modulation (SPWM) duty ratio to stabilize the output current. In the PSIM power electronic simulation software environment, the operation of the soft-switching inverter circuit is analyzed to demonstrate our proposed topology can reduce the on-off switching losses as expected for the switching transistors of the soft-switching inverter circuit.

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