Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker

Efficiency is an important performance measure for DC-DC converters. Its measurement can be extremely difficult when the DC-DC converter is highly efficient and the power loss is extremely low. The input and the output waveforms of a high frequency dc-dc converter may have high frequency components...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wolfs, Peter, Li, Q.
Other Authors: Syed Islam
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Curtin University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31077
_version_ 1848753274302234624
author Wolfs, Peter
Li, Q.
author2 Syed Islam
author_facet Syed Islam
Wolfs, Peter
Li, Q.
author_sort Wolfs, Peter
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Efficiency is an important performance measure for DC-DC converters. Its measurement can be extremely difficult when the DC-DC converter is highly efficient and the power loss is extremely low. The input and the output waveforms of a high frequency dc-dc converter may have high frequency components superimposed on the DC components. This further complicates the measurement process as some digital instruments tend to misbehave. Calorimetry method has been previously proposed as an alternative and indirect power loss measurement method. This paper proposes an improved calorimetry method which is capable of resolving the power loss below 2 mW. The method is demonstrated for a single-cell maximum power point tracker with a power rating of 650 mW. The experimental results confirm that the device under test presents a power loss of 24 mW +1.3 mW and the converter achieves an efficiency of 96.2% + 0.2%.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:21:55Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-31077
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:21:55Z
publishDate 2007
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-310772017-10-02T02:27:38Z Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker Wolfs, Peter Li, Q. Syed Islam loss measurement DC-DC power convertors losses calorimetry Efficiency is an important performance measure for DC-DC converters. Its measurement can be extremely difficult when the DC-DC converter is highly efficient and the power loss is extremely low. The input and the output waveforms of a high frequency dc-dc converter may have high frequency components superimposed on the DC components. This further complicates the measurement process as some digital instruments tend to misbehave. Calorimetry method has been previously proposed as an alternative and indirect power loss measurement method. This paper proposes an improved calorimetry method which is capable of resolving the power loss below 2 mW. The method is demonstrated for a single-cell maximum power point tracker with a power rating of 650 mW. The experimental results confirm that the device under test presents a power loss of 24 mW +1.3 mW and the converter achieves an efficiency of 96.2% + 0.2%. 2007 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31077 Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle loss measurement
DC-DC power convertors
losses
calorimetry
Wolfs, Peter
Li, Q.
Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title_full Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title_fullStr Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title_full_unstemmed Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title_short Precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
title_sort precision calorimetry for power loss measurement of a very low power maximum power point tracker
topic loss measurement
DC-DC power convertors
losses
calorimetry
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31077