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Nanolaminated Permalloy Core for High-Flux, High-Frequency Ultracompact Power Conversion

Authors :
Florian Herrault
Richard H. Shafer
Preston Galle
Jae Yeong Park
Jooncheol Kim
Mark G. Allen
Minsoo Kim
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics. 28:4376-4383
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2013.

Abstract

Metallic magnetic materials have desirable magnetic properties, including high permeability, and high saturation flux density, when compared with their ferrite counterparts. However, eddy-current losses preclude their use in many switching converter applications, due to the challenge of simultaneously achieving sufficiently thin laminations such that eddy currents are suppressed (e.g., 500 nm-1 μm for megahertz frequencies), while simultaneously achieving overall core thicknesses such that substantial power can be handled. A CMOS-compatible fabrication process based on robot-assisted sequential electrodeposition followed by selective chemical etching has been developed for the realization of a core of substantial overall thickness (tens to hundreds of micrometers) comprised of multiple, stacked permalloy (Ni80Fe20) nanolaminations. Tests of toroidal inductors with nanolaminated cores showed negligible eddy-current loss relative to total core loss even at a peak flux density of 0.5 T in the megahertz frequency range. To illustrate the use of these cores, a buck power converter topology is implemented with switching frequencies of 1-2 MHz. Power conversion efficiency greater than 85% with peak operating flux density of 0.3-0.5 T in the core and converter output power level exceeding 5 W was achieved.

Details

ISSN :
19410107 and 08858993
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f7d31517baa818c46641923325376515