Synthesis of Active Cell Balancing Architectures for Battery Packs
Active balancing architectures effectively increase the efficiency of large battery packs by equalizing charge between cells. For this purpose, a balancing circuit and appropriate control scheme have to be designed to enable the charge transfer via energy storage elements such as inductors. Using a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on computer-aided design of integrated circuits and systems 2016-11, Vol.35 (11), p.1876-1889 |
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container_end_page | 1889 |
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container_issue | 11 |
container_start_page | 1876 |
container_title | IEEE transactions on computer-aided design of integrated circuits and systems |
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creator | Lukasiewycz, Martin Kauer, Matthias Steinhorst, Sebastian |
description | Active balancing architectures effectively increase the efficiency of large battery packs by equalizing charge between cells. For this purpose, a balancing circuit and appropriate control scheme have to be designed to enable the charge transfer via energy storage elements such as inductors. Using a manual approach to design balancing architectures can be tedious and error-prone, resulting in potentially suboptimal solutions. As a remedy, this paper presents an automatic synthesis of balancing circuits and their corresponding control, optimizing the number of required metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, and necessary control signals. The proposed synthesis combines a satisfiability solver to explore the search space with a graph-based verification that iteratively excludes infeasible solutions until the optimal architectures are obtained. The experimental results are carried out for three given template circuits and two signal templates. The synthesis results in architectures that are superior in terms of all design objectives in comparison to solutions from literature that result from a manual design approach. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1109/TCAD.2016.2531049 |
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For this purpose, a balancing circuit and appropriate control scheme have to be designed to enable the charge transfer via energy storage elements such as inductors. Using a manual approach to design balancing architectures can be tedious and error-prone, resulting in potentially suboptimal solutions. As a remedy, this paper presents an automatic synthesis of balancing circuits and their corresponding control, optimizing the number of required metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, and necessary control signals. The proposed synthesis combines a satisfiability solver to explore the search space with a graph-based verification that iteratively excludes infeasible solutions until the optimal architectures are obtained. The experimental results are carried out for three given template circuits and two signal templates. The synthesis results in architectures that are superior in terms of all design objectives in comparison to solutions from literature that result from a manual design approach.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0278-0070</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1937-4151</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1109/TCAD.2016.2531049</identifier><identifier>CODEN: ITCSDI</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>New York: IEEE</publisher><subject>Active cell balancing ; Architecture ; Batteries ; battery pack design ; Charge transfer ; circuit synthesis ; Circuits ; Computer architecture ; Design engineering ; Electric batteries ; Inductors ; Manuals ; Mathematical models ; Microprocessors ; MOSFET ; Optimization ; Pulse width modulation ; Synthesis</subject><ispartof>IEEE transactions on computer-aided design of integrated circuits and systems, 2016-11, Vol.35 (11), p.1876-1889</ispartof><rights>Copyright The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 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For this purpose, a balancing circuit and appropriate control scheme have to be designed to enable the charge transfer via energy storage elements such as inductors. Using a manual approach to design balancing architectures can be tedious and error-prone, resulting in potentially suboptimal solutions. As a remedy, this paper presents an automatic synthesis of balancing circuits and their corresponding control, optimizing the number of required metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, and necessary control signals. The proposed synthesis combines a satisfiability solver to explore the search space with a graph-based verification that iteratively excludes infeasible solutions until the optimal architectures are obtained. The experimental results are carried out for three given template circuits and two signal templates. The synthesis results in architectures that are superior in terms of all design objectives in comparison to solutions from literature that result from a manual design approach.</description><subject>Active cell balancing</subject><subject>Architecture</subject><subject>Batteries</subject><subject>battery pack design</subject><subject>Charge transfer</subject><subject>circuit synthesis</subject><subject>Circuits</subject><subject>Computer architecture</subject><subject>Design engineering</subject><subject>Electric batteries</subject><subject>Inductors</subject><subject>Manuals</subject><subject>Mathematical models</subject><subject>Microprocessors</subject><subject>MOSFET</subject><subject>Optimization</subject><subject>Pulse width modulation</subject><subject>Synthesis</subject><issn>0278-0070</issn><issn>1937-4151</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2016</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>RIE</sourceid><recordid>eNpdkEtLAzEUhYMoWKs_QNwMuHEzNZk8JllO6xMKCtZ1yKQ3dup0piYZof_elIoLV3dxv3M4fAhdEjwhBKvbxay6mxSYiEnBKcFMHaERUbTMGeHkGI1wUcoc4xKforMQ1hgTxgs1QtO3XRdXEJqQ9S6rbGy-IZtB22ZT05rONt1HVnm7aiLYOHgImet9-sUIfpe9GvsZztGJM22Ai987Ru8P94vZUz5_eXyeVfPcUiVivqTWQBqAoWQFxQ4zSSQIabFTpbC8lowyx62sHeVLbhSrgQksGAdZK8PpGN0cere-_xogRL1pgk1TTQf9EDSRnNOScaYSev0PXfeD79K6RFFSSCmkSBQ5UNb3IXhweuubjfE7TbDeW9V7q3pvVf9aTZmrQ6YBgD--ZCQZ5fQHFVBxHA</recordid><startdate>201611</startdate><enddate>201611</enddate><creator>Lukasiewycz, Martin</creator><creator>Kauer, Matthias</creator><creator>Steinhorst, Sebastian</creator><general>IEEE</general><general>The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 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For this purpose, a balancing circuit and appropriate control scheme have to be designed to enable the charge transfer via energy storage elements such as inductors. Using a manual approach to design balancing architectures can be tedious and error-prone, resulting in potentially suboptimal solutions. As a remedy, this paper presents an automatic synthesis of balancing circuits and their corresponding control, optimizing the number of required metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, and necessary control signals. The proposed synthesis combines a satisfiability solver to explore the search space with a graph-based verification that iteratively excludes infeasible solutions until the optimal architectures are obtained. The experimental results are carried out for three given template circuits and two signal templates. 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subjects | Active cell balancing Architecture Batteries battery pack design Charge transfer circuit synthesis Circuits Computer architecture Design engineering Electric batteries Inductors Manuals Mathematical models Microprocessors MOSFET Optimization Pulse width modulation Synthesis |
title | Synthesis of Active Cell Balancing Architectures for Battery Packs |
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