WO1993026079A1 - Configurable inverter for 120 vac or 240 vac output - Google Patents

Configurable inverter for 120 vac or 240 vac output Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1993026079A1
WO1993026079A1 PCT/US1993/005594 US9305594W WO9326079A1 WO 1993026079 A1 WO1993026079 A1 WO 1993026079A1 US 9305594 W US9305594 W US 9305594W WO 9326079 A1 WO9326079 A1 WO 9326079A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
series
connection
output
sources
switches
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1993/005594
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
James M. Simonelli
Zeljko Arbanas
Original Assignee
Digital Equipment Corporation
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Digital Equipment Corporation filed Critical Digital Equipment Corporation
Priority to DE69308746T priority Critical patent/DE69308746T2/en
Priority to EP93915303A priority patent/EP0598111B1/en
Publication of WO1993026079A1 publication Critical patent/WO1993026079A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02MAPPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
    • H02M7/00Conversion of ac power input into dc power output; Conversion of dc power input into ac power output
    • H02M7/42Conversion of dc power input into ac power output without possibility of reversal
    • H02M7/44Conversion of dc power input into ac power output without possibility of reversal by static converters
    • H02M7/48Conversion of dc power input into ac power output without possibility of reversal by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode

Definitions

  • This invention is related generally to the field of power supply to electronic equipment, in particular, the supply of conditioned AC power for domestic or international operation at 120 VAC or 240 VAC respectively.
  • DC/AC inverters that may be configured to either 120 VAC or 240 VAC operations with a minimum of change of components. Achievement of this goal also allows for field reconfiguration of the power supplies.
  • the first approach shown in Fig. 1, is a traditional full bridge inverter in which the DC voltage is supplied by a battery or DC storage capacitor 10, and a controller 20 signals switches 30 and 60 (typically MOSFETS) to open and close alternately with switches 40 and 50.
  • the load 90 therefore sees a "full wave” AC signal, smoothed by inductor 70 and capacitor 80.
  • V o ⁇ V 2D-1
  • V out instantaneous output voltage
  • V ⁇ n DC input voltage
  • V ⁇ s RMS output voltage
  • the inverter To operate with both a 120 VAC and 240 VAC output voltage and produce the same VA, the inverter must generate twice as much current in the 120 VAC mode as in the 240 VAC mode. Thus, all components must be sized to handle the greater current seen during the 120 VAC operating mode. Second, because D the duty cycle is restricted to a value between 0 and 1, the DC input voltage input voltage must be greater than the peak of the AC output voltage plus some margin.
  • the 240 VAC (340 V, ⁇ ) mode defines the minimum DC input voltage. This is significant because, when operating at 120 VAC, the maximum duty cycle D will not approach 1, but will be significantly (20-30%) less.
  • FIG. 2 A second approach is depicted in Fig. 2.
  • This method utilizes two half bridge inverters 200 and 250 with isolated sources 201 and 251, such that DC sources 202 and 252 respectively are connected to outputs 235 and 285 alternately with and in opposite polarity to sources 203 and 253, according to the alternate closing of switches 210 and 260 and of 211 and 261.
  • outputs 235 and 285 are connected, and outputs 240 and 290 are connected to drive a load in parallel.
  • outputs 240 and 285 are connected in a series connection, and the load is driven off outputs 235 and 290.
  • the same equations set forth above for the first approach apply to each bridge section.
  • the inverter described here solves the problem by configuring the inverter as two half bridges in parallel for 120 VAC and as a single full bridge for 240 VAC operation.
  • the output inductor is designed as a coupled inductor whose windings are used to control current sharing between the two half bridges and is configured as a single inductor for full bridge operation.
  • the two half bridges are reconfigured as a single full bridge. Again, because the output voltage has doubled, the maximum duty cycle remains the same as for 120 VAC half bridge operation. However, because of the higher output voltage, the rms output current for the full bridge configuration is one-half the total rms current for the paralleled half bridge. This implies that the total losses of the inverter do not change from 120 VAC to 240 VAC operation. Thus, the same MOSFET switches and other components may be used for both configurations.
  • Another important aspect of this embodiment is that for either mode of operation, the basic small signal transfer functions for control remain the same. This can be seen by reference to the small signal models discussed below for Figs. 5A and 5B.
  • the invention allows precisely the same components to be used, with simple changes in jumper connections, in the 120 VAC or 240 VAC configurations and has been found to be feasible for outputs on the order of 4 KVA.
  • the invention provides the maximum use of all components in the design under both operating conditions and requires manufacturing operations to build and stock only one type of inverter. Because of this, the invention provides the most cost effective solution and should have better cost/watt and watt/volume metrics than traditional approaches, certainly as compared to stocking two distinct converters.
  • Fig. 1 shows a traditional full bridge inverter for illustration.
  • Fig.2 shows a second approach to configurability of inverters for 120 VAC and 240 VAC output.
  • Fig. 3A shows the 120 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
  • Fig. 3B shows the 240 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
  • Fig. 4 shows an illustrative embodiment with the jumper connections required for conversion between 120 VAC and 240 VAC output.
  • Fig. 5A shows the small signal model of the 120 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
  • Fig. 5B shows the small signal model of the 240 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
  • Fig. 3 A shows the inverter of this invention configured in the 120 VAC operating mode, that is, as two half bridges.
  • DC source 310 is connected to load 351 and capacitors 341 and 342 (in parallel) through inductors 331 and 332 (in parallel) when switches 321 and 323 are closed and switches 322 and 324 are open.
  • DC source 311 is connected in the reverse polarity to load 351 and capacitors 341 and 342 through inductors 331 and 332 when switches 322 and 324 are closed and switches 321 and 323 are open.
  • the switches in the illustrative embodiment are MOSFET gates that may be opened and closed using standard pulse width modulation techniques to variably gate current to build, for example, a sine wave (of one phase).
  • Other gates may be used, as long as uni ⁇ directional gates allow current to flow in the direction from the positive to negative terminals of the DC sources, that is, in the direction from 310 through 321 through 322 to 311 and from 310 through 323 through 324 to 311, although current will never flow through gates on the same half-bridge (321 and 322; 323 and 324) during the same half- cycle.
  • the coupling between the inductors 331 and 332, which in the illustrative embodiment have the same number of turns (N), tends to assure that current is divided equally on the parallel paths, since applying Ampere's law, I 331 N I 332 N.
  • the sharing of the current flow on the parallel paths or half-bridges allows the selection of MOSFET switches (drivers), as well as other components, at lower power ratings.
  • Fig. 3B shows the inverter of this invention configured in the 240 VAC operating mode, that is, a full bridge.
  • DC sources 310 and 311 in series are connected to load 352 and capacitors 341 and 342 (in series) through separate inductors 331 and 332 (in series) when switches 321 and 324 are closed and switches 322 and 323 are open.
  • DC sources 310 and 311 in series are connected in reverse polarity to load 352 and capacitors 341 and 342 through inductors 331 and 332 when switches 322 and 323 are closed and switches 321 and 324 are open.
  • Fig. 4 shows a simplified implementation of the invention on a 4 KVA DC/AC inverter.
  • the DC voltage sources 310 and 311 correspond to the sources so labeled on Figs. 3 A and 3B, as do the other components.
  • Switches 321, 322, 323, and 324 are shown as high voltage driver boxes.
  • the inductor 331, the capacitors 341 and 342 and inductor 332 are arranged in series from a common output line from drivers 321 and 322 to a common output line from drivers 323 and 324.
  • Jumper junctions 403, 402 and 404 are provided between the inductors and capacitors. Outputs to load 351 are provided from a point between inductor 331 and capacitor 341 and from a jumper junction 410. When jumper junction 410 is connected to jumper junction 420 in the "B" connection, a full bridge is formed for 240 VAC output. If the jumper junction 410 is instead connected to jumper junction 402, jumper junction 402 connected to jumper junction 401 between the DC voltage sources 310 and 311, and jumper junction 403 connected to jumper junction 404 in the "A" connections, parallel half bridges are formed for 120 VAC output.
  • Figs. 5 A and 5B respectively show the small signal models of the 120 VAC and 240 VAC configurations of the invention.
  • Lp is the inductance of the inductors 331 and 332 in series
  • C F is the capacitance of one of the capacitors 341 or 342. Because small signal source 510 in the 120 VAC parallel half bridge configuration drives in series two of the inductors in parallel and in shunt two of the capacitors in parallel, it drives series inductive load 530 that has inductance Lp 4 and shunt capacitive load 540 that has capacitance 2Cp.
  • small signal source 515 in the 240 VAC full bridge configuration drives in series two of the inductors in series and in shunt two of the capacitors in series, it drives series inductive load 535 that has inductance Lj- and shunt capacitive load 545 that has capacitance C- 2.
  • series inductive load 535 that has inductance Lj- and shunt capacitive load 545 that has capacitance C- 2.
  • the products of these impedances are identical, resulting in the same small signal transfer function.

Abstract

An inverter circuit configurable between 120 VAC output and 240 VAC output using the same components and using easily made jumper connections. The inverter is configured as two half bridges in parallel for 120 VAC and as a single full bridge for 240 VAC operation.

Description

CONFIGURABLE INVERTER FOR 120 VAC OR
240 VAC OUTPUT
Field of the Invention This invention is related generally to the field of power supply to electronic equipment, in particular, the supply of conditioned AC power for domestic or international operation at 120 VAC or 240 VAC respectively.
Background of the Invention Because electric power generally is available at 120 VAC domestically, but at 240 VAC in other countries, particularly European nations, electronic equipment used in those respective geographic locations are expected to have power requirements at those respective voltages. In turn, AC power supplies for power protection, such as the so-called "uninterruptible" power supply ("U.P.S."), generally must have the respective voltage output to service those geographic locations. As contemporary U.P.S. systems convert line AC to DC and then "rebuild" a "clean" AC signal using inverters, the inverters must provide either a 120 VAC or 240 VAC output in the respective geographic location.
Rather than have different designs for these inverters, adding to the cost of development, manufacturing and stocking, it is desirable to have DC/AC inverters that may be configured to either 120 VAC or 240 VAC operations with a minimum of change of components. Achievement of this goal also allows for field reconfiguration of the power supplies.
Two approaches have been explored to achieve this goal. The first approach, shown in Fig. 1, is a traditional full bridge inverter in which the DC voltage is supplied by a battery or DC storage capacitor 10, and a controller 20 signals switches 30 and 60 (typically MOSFETS) to open and close alternately with switches 40 and 50. The load 90 therefore sees a "full wave" AC signal, smoothed by inductor 70 and capacitor 80. Some fundamental equations governing the input/output relationship of this inverter are
V = V 2D-1) and
V ' "Aout = - T"Orms V * oims where
Vout = instantaneous output voltage Vιn = DC input voltage
D = duty cycle = time switches on/period
VA0Ul = output volt amperes loπas = RMS output current V^s = RMS output voltage
As evident from these relationships, to operate with both a 120 VAC and 240 VAC output voltage and produce the same VA, the inverter must generate twice as much current in the 120 VAC mode as in the 240 VAC mode. Thus, all components must be sized to handle the greater current seen during the 120 VAC operating mode. Second, because D the duty cycle is restricted to a value between 0 and 1, the DC input voltage input voltage must be greater than the peak of the AC output voltage plus some margin.
To operate in both modes, the 240 VAC (340 V,^) mode defines the minimum DC input voltage. This is significant because, when operating at 120 VAC, the maximum duty cycle D will not approach 1, but will be significantly (20-30%) less.
This means that the bridge switches must not only conduct greater currents at 120 VAC operation, but carry the current with less conduction time. This has a significant impact on the conduction losses in the bridge switches.
A second approach is depicted in Fig. 2. This method utilizes two half bridge inverters 200 and 250 with isolated sources 201 and 251, such that DC sources 202 and 252 respectively are connected to outputs 235 and 285 alternately with and in opposite polarity to sources 203 and 253, according to the alternate closing of switches 210 and 260 and of 211 and 261. For 120 VAC operation, outputs 235 and 285 are connected, and outputs 240 and 290 are connected to drive a load in parallel. For 240 VAC operation, outputs 240 and 285 are connected in a series connection, and the load is driven off outputs 235 and 290. The same equations set forth above for the first approach apply to each bridge section.
This second approach would allow each bridge to be optimized relative to input voltage and rms current stresses. However, the methods for controlling the output voltage and guaranteeing the equal share of power between the two bridges present a complex control problem. Moreover, it became apparent that different methods of control were required for each of the 120 VAC and 240 VAC modes of operation, defeating the goal of maximizing the commonality of control circuitry.
Summary of the Invention The invention in its broad form resides in a DC to AC inverter as recited in Claim 1.
The inverter described here solves the problem by configuring the inverter as two half bridges in parallel for 120 VAC and as a single full bridge for 240 VAC operation. In addition to this configuration change, the output inductor is designed as a coupled inductor whose windings are used to control current sharing between the two half bridges and is configured as a single inductor for full bridge operation.
The standard equations described above apply both to a half bridge and to a full bridge inverter. The only difference is that the input voltage Vιn for the half bridge is the voltage across one of the input sources (capacitors) rather than for both. Therefore V^ would be one-half the value it would be for a full bridge. The significance is that the inverter for 120 VAC operation will not need to decrease its maximum duty cycle for the same DC input voltage applied to a full bridge. Therefore, this invention allows each half bridge to operate at one-half the total power and operate at near full duty cycle for 120 VAC operation. Thus, each half bridge is sized only to handle one-half the maximum rms output current for 120 VAC operation.
For 240 VAC operation, the two half bridges are reconfigured as a single full bridge. Again, because the output voltage has doubled, the maximum duty cycle remains the same as for 120 VAC half bridge operation. However, because of the higher output voltage, the rms output current for the full bridge configuration is one-half the total rms current for the paralleled half bridge. This implies that the total losses of the inverter do not change from 120 VAC to 240 VAC operation. Thus, the same MOSFET switches and other components may be used for both configurations.
Another important aspect of this embodiment is that for either mode of operation, the basic small signal transfer functions for control remain the same. This can be seen by reference to the small signal models discussed below for Figs. 5A and 5B.
The invention allows precisely the same components to be used, with simple changes in jumper connections, in the 120 VAC or 240 VAC configurations and has been found to be feasible for outputs on the order of 4 KVA. Thus, the invention provides the maximum use of all components in the design under both operating conditions and requires manufacturing operations to build and stock only one type of inverter. Because of this, the invention provides the most cost effective solution and should have better cost/watt and watt/volume metrics than traditional approaches, certainly as compared to stocking two distinct converters.
Brief Description of the Drawings A better understanding of the invention may be had from the following description of preferred embodiments given by way of example only and to be understood in conjunction with the following drawing wherein:
Fig. 1 shows a traditional full bridge inverter for illustration.
Fig.2 shows a second approach to configurability of inverters for 120 VAC and 240 VAC output.
Fig. 3A shows the 120 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
Fig. 3B shows the 240 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
Fig. 4 shows an illustrative embodiment with the jumper connections required for conversion between 120 VAC and 240 VAC output.
Fig. 5A shows the small signal model of the 120 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
Fig. 5B shows the small signal model of the 240 VAC configuration of the illustrative embodiment.
Detailed Description of an Illustrative Embodiment
Fig. 3 A shows the inverter of this invention configured in the 120 VAC operating mode, that is, as two half bridges. Thus, in one half-cycle, DC source 310 is connected to load 351 and capacitors 341 and 342 (in parallel) through inductors 331 and 332 (in parallel) when switches 321 and 323 are closed and switches 322 and 324 are open. In the alternate half-cycle, DC source 311 is connected in the reverse polarity to load 351 and capacitors 341 and 342 through inductors 331 and 332 when switches 322 and 324 are closed and switches 321 and 323 are open. The switches in the illustrative embodiment are MOSFET gates that may be opened and closed using standard pulse width modulation techniques to variably gate current to build, for example, a sine wave (of one phase). Other gates may be used, as long as uni¬ directional gates allow current to flow in the direction from the positive to negative terminals of the DC sources, that is, in the direction from 310 through 321 through 322 to 311 and from 310 through 323 through 324 to 311, although current will never flow through gates on the same half-bridge (321 and 322; 323 and 324) during the same half- cycle.
The coupling between the inductors 331 and 332, which in the illustrative embodiment have the same number of turns (N), tends to assure that current is divided equally on the parallel paths, since applying Ampere's law, I331N = I332N. The sharing of the current flow on the parallel paths or half-bridges allows the selection of MOSFET switches (drivers), as well as other components, at lower power ratings.
Fig. 3B shows the inverter of this invention configured in the 240 VAC operating mode, that is, a full bridge. Thus, in one half-cycle, DC sources 310 and 311 in series are connected to load 352 and capacitors 341 and 342 (in series) through separate inductors 331 and 332 (in series) when switches 321 and 324 are closed and switches 322 and 323 are open. In the alternate half-cycle, DC sources 310 and 311 in series are connected in reverse polarity to load 352 and capacitors 341 and 342 through inductors 331 and 332 when switches 322 and 323 are closed and switches 321 and 324 are open.
The method of changing from one configuration to the other can be most easily accomplished by changing jumper wires to redirect switch control and to parallel or series the output inductor. This is the only change that is required. All components remain the same for both operations. Thus, Fig. 4 shows a simplified implementation of the invention on a 4 KVA DC/AC inverter. The DC voltage sources 310 and 311 correspond to the sources so labeled on Figs. 3 A and 3B, as do the other components. Switches 321, 322, 323, and 324 are shown as high voltage driver boxes. The inductor 331, the capacitors 341 and 342 and inductor 332 are arranged in series from a common output line from drivers 321 and 322 to a common output line from drivers 323 and 324. Jumper junctions 403, 402 and 404 (420) are provided between the inductors and capacitors. Outputs to load 351 are provided from a point between inductor 331 and capacitor 341 and from a jumper junction 410. When jumper junction 410 is connected to jumper junction 420 in the "B" connection, a full bridge is formed for 240 VAC output. If the jumper junction 410 is instead connected to jumper junction 402, jumper junction 402 connected to jumper junction 401 between the DC voltage sources 310 and 311, and jumper junction 403 connected to jumper junction 404 in the "A" connections, parallel half bridges are formed for 120 VAC output.
Figs. 5 A and 5B respectively show the small signal models of the 120 VAC and 240 VAC configurations of the invention. In the figures, Lp is the inductance of the inductors 331 and 332 in series, and CF is the capacitance of one of the capacitors 341 or 342. Because small signal source 510 in the 120 VAC parallel half bridge configuration drives in series two of the inductors in parallel and in shunt two of the capacitors in parallel, it drives series inductive load 530 that has inductance Lp 4 and shunt capacitive load 540 that has capacitance 2Cp. Because small signal source 515 in the 240 VAC full bridge configuration drives in series two of the inductors in series and in shunt two of the capacitors in series, it drives series inductive load 535 that has inductance Lj- and shunt capacitive load 545 that has capacitance C- 2. The products of these impedances are identical, resulting in the same small signal transfer function.
The foregoing description has been limited to a specific embodiment of this invention. It will be apparent, however, that variations and modifications may be made to the invention, with the attainment of some or all of the advantages of the invention.

Claims

Claims
1. A DC to AC inverter circuit for output alternatively at a first AC
voltage level and at a second AC voltage level half the first level, said inverter circuit
comprising:
A) two substantially identical DC sources 310 and 311
connected in series to present a positive terminal and a negative terminal;
B) a first switch 321 connected to the positive terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
C) a second switch 322 connected in series to said first switch and to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
D) a third switch 323 connected to the positive terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
E) a fourth switch 324 connected in series to said third switch and to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
F) a first inductor 331 connected to the connection between said first and second switches;
G) two substantially identical capacitors 341 and 342 connected in series to said first inductor at the port of said first inductor remote from the connection between said first and second switches;
H) a second inductor 332 substantially identical to said first inductor connected in series to said series-connected capacitors remote from said first inductor and connected to the connection between said third and fourth switches; and
I) one AC output at the connection between said first inductor and said series-connected capacitors; wherein
J) said inverter circuit is configurable alternatively to obtain one of the following two configurations:
i) for output at said first AC voltage level, by (a) opening and closing said first and third gates in unison alternatively with opening and closing said second and fourth gates in unison; and (b) taking a second AC output from the connection between said second inductor and said series-connected capacitors; or
ii) for output at said second AC voltage level, by (a)connecting the connection between said series-connected capacitors to the connection between said series-connected DC sources; (b)connecting the connection between said first inductor and said series-connected capacitors to the connection between said second inductor and said series-connected capacitors; (c) opening and closing said first and fourth gates in unison alternately with opening and closing said second and third gates; and (d) taking a second AC output from the connection between said series-connected capacitors.
2. The inverter of Claim 1 wherein said first, second, third, and fourth switches are MOSFET switches.
3. The inverter of Claim 1 wherein the connections recited in clauses (J)(ii)(a) and (J)(ii)(b) are made by jumper connections.
4. A DC to AC inverter circuit for output alternatively at a first AC voltage level and at a second AC voltage level half said first voltage level, said inverter circuit comprising:
A) two substantially identical DC sources connected in series to present a positive terminal and a negative terminal;
B) a first half-bridge comprising:
i) a first switch connected to the positive terminal of said series-connected DC sources; and ii) a second switch connected in series to said first gate and 13 to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
14
15 C) a second half-bridge comprising:
i6
17 i) a third switch connected to the positive terminal of said
18 series-connected DC sources; and 19
20 ii) a fourth switch connected in series to said third gate and
21 to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources; and 2
23 D) one AC output from the connection between said first and
24 second switches; wherein 25
26 E) said inverter circuit is configurable alternatively 27
28 i) for output at said first AC voltage level, by (a) opening and
29 closing said first and third switches in unison alternately with opening
30 and closing said second and fourth switches in unison; and (b) taking
31 a second AC output from the connection between said third and fourth
32 switches to form a full bridge; or 33
34 ii) for output at said second AC voltage level, by (a)connecting
35 the connection between said first and second switches to the
36 connection between said third and fourth switches to form parallel half-bridges; (b) opening and closing said first and fourth switches in unison alternately with opening and closing said second and third switches; and (c) taking a second AC output from the connection between said series-connected DC sources.
5. The inverter of Claim 4 further comprising means for balancing current passing through said switches.
6. The inverter of Claim 5 wherein said balancing means comprises parallel, matched and inductively coupled inductors placed between each of said connections between said first and second switches and third and fourth switches for output at said second AC voltage level.
7. A DC to AC inverter circuit for output alternatively at a first AC voltage level and at a second AC voltage level half the first level, said inverter circuit comprising: A) two substantially identical DC sources connected in series;
B) a first half -bridge comprising:
i) a first gate connected to the positive terminal of said series-connected DC sources;
ii) a second gate connected in series to said first gate and to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources; and iii) a first capacitor connected to the connection between said first and second gates;
C) a second half-bridge comprising:
i) a third gate connected to the positive terminal of said series- connected DC sources;
ii) a fourth gate connected in series to said third gate and to the negative terminal of said series-connected DC sources; and
iii) a second capacitor connected to the connection between said third and fourth gates;
D) a connection between the end of said first capacitor remote from the connection between said first and second gates and the end of said second capacitor remote from the connection between said third and fourth gates; and
E) one AC output at the connection between said first and second gates; wherein
F) said inverter circuit is configurable alternatively 36 i) for output at said first AC voltage level, by (a) opening and
37 closing said first and third gates in unison alternately with opening and
38 closing said second and fourth gates in unison; and (b) taking a second
39 AC output from the connection between said third and fourth gates to
40 form a full bridge; or 41
42 ii) for output at said second AC voltage level, by (a)connecting
43 the connection between said first and second gates to the connection
44 between said third and fourth gates to form parallel half-bridges; (b)
45 opening and closing said first and fourth gates in unison alternatively
46 with opening and closing said second and third gates in unison; (c)
47 connecting the connection between said first and second capacitors to
48 the connection between said series-connected DC sources; and (c)
49 taking a second AC output from the connection between said series-
50 connected DC sources.
PCT/US1993/005594 1992-06-10 1993-06-09 Configurable inverter for 120 vac or 240 vac output WO1993026079A1 (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE69308746T DE69308746T2 (en) 1992-06-10 1993-06-09 CONFIGURABLE INVERTER FOR 120 V OR240 V OUTPUT VOLTAGE
EP93915303A EP0598111B1 (en) 1992-06-10 1993-06-09 Configurable inverter for 120 vac or 240 vac output

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US07/896,712 US5260864A (en) 1992-06-10 1992-06-10 Configurable inverter for 120 VAC or 240 VAC output
US07/896,712 1992-06-10

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EP0598111A1 (en) 1994-05-25
US5260864A (en) 1993-11-09
DE69308746D1 (en) 1997-04-17
EP0598111B1 (en) 1997-03-12
DE69308746T2 (en) 1997-10-30

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