High-frequency LLC
(Inductor-Inductor-Capacitor) and DAB (Dual Active Bridge) topologies
are both critical isolated DC-DC conversion topologies in modern power
electronic systems, widely used in scenarios such as data centers, new
energy vehicle charging, and energy storage systems. Their core
differences are reflected in multiple dimensions, including topology
structure, working principles, performance characteristics, and
application scenarios. The following provides a detailed comparison
across six core dimensions:
1. Topology Structure: Presence of a Resonant Network
The
topology structure is the most fundamental difference between the two,
directly determining their working principles and performance
boundaries.
- LLC Topology:
The LLC topology adds a resonant network (resonant inductor L_r,
resonant capacitor C_r, magnetizing inductor L_m) to the traditional
half-bridge/full-bridge converter, forming a structure of 'bridge arms +
resonant cavity + high-frequency transformer.' Here, the magnetizing
inductor L_m is an inherent parameter of the transformer, which together
with the resonant inductor L_r constitutes the resonant circuit.
Typical structure: The primary side is a half-bridge/full-bridge, the
secondary side uses rectifier diodes (unidirectional) or active switches
(bidirectional), connected via the resonant network and the
high-frequency transformer.
- DAB Topology:
The DAB topology employs a dual full-bridge structure (full-bridge on
both primary and secondary sides) connected by a high-frequency
transformer, without an additional resonant network. Its core mechanism
involves controlling the phase difference (phase shift angle) between
the bridge arms on both sides to regulate the direction and magnitude of
power flow. Typical structure: The primary full-bridge and secondary
full-bridge are coupled via the transformer; the driving signals for the
switches are high-frequency square waves, achieving soft switching
(ZVS) through phase shift control.
2. Working Principle: Soft-Switching Implementation and Power Control
Differences
in topology lead to completely different working principles, primarily
manifested in soft-switching implementation and power regulation
mechanisms.
LLC Topology:
The core working principle of LLC is frequency control (adjusting the
switching frequency f_s), achieving Zero Voltage Switching (ZVS) and
Zero Current Switching (ZCS) through the resonant network.
- When
the switching frequency f_s equals the resonant frequency f_r (f_r = 1 /
(2π√(L_r C_r))), the resonant current is sinusoidal, the voltage stress
on the switches is zero (ZVS), and the current stress on the rectifier
diodes is zero (ZCS), resulting in very low switching losses.
- Power
regulation is achieved by changing f_s: when f_s > f_r, the resonant
network is inductive, and power flows from primary to secondary; when
f_s < f_r, the resonant network is capacitive, and power flows in
reverse (bidirectional LLC requires replacing diodes with active
switches).
DAB Topology:
The core working principle of DAB is phase shift control (adjusting the
phase difference ψ between the bridge arms on both sides), achieving
soft switching through the leakage inductance or an external inductor.
- The full bridges on the
primary and secondary sides generate high-frequency square waves. After
coupling through the transformer, the phase difference between these
square waves determines the power flow direction (power flows from
primary to secondary when ψ > 0, and reverses when ψ < 0).
- Soft
switching is achieved via the transformer's leakage inductance (or an
externally added resonant inductor): when a primary switch turns off,
the leakage inductance current discharges the parasitic capacitance of
the secondary switches, enabling ZVS turn-on for the secondary switches
and reducing switching losses.
- Power regulation is achieved by changing ψ: a larger ψ results in greater transmitted power; no power is transmitted when ψ = 0.
3. Performance Characteristics: Comparison of Efficiency, EMI, and Voltage Adaptability
Performance
characteristics are key to their application differences, mainly
reflected in efficiency, EMI, and voltage adaptability.
- Efficiency:
- LLC Topology:
Higher efficiency across a wide load range (especially light load and
full load). Due to the ZVS/ZCS characteristics of the resonant network,
switching losses are extremely low, especially near the resonant
frequency, where efficiency can exceed 98% (e.g., in data center power
supplies, vehicle OBCs).
- DAB Topology:
High efficiency under heavy load conditions, but efficiency decreases
at light loads due to reduced resonant currents and diminished
soft-switching effects (typically between 95% - 97%).
- EMI (Electromagnetic Interference):
- LLC Topology:
Due to the sinusoidal resonant current, EMI is lower, requiring only
simple filter circuits to meet standards (e.g., EN 55032 Class B).
- DAB Topology:
Due to the high-frequency switching of square-wave voltages, current
ripple is larger, requiring larger filter capacitors (e.g., electrolytic
capacitors). EMI is higher, necessitating complex EMI suppression
circuits (e.g., common-mode chokes, X/Y capacitors).
- Voltage Adaptability:
- LLC Topology:
More sensitive to input voltage fluctuations, requiring strict control
over the matching between resonant frequency and switching frequency;
otherwise, efficiency drops. For example, when input voltage increases,
the resonant frequency shifts, requiring adjustment of the switching
frequency to maintain resonance, which increases control complexity.
- DAB Topology:
Less sensitive to input voltage fluctuations. Output voltage stability
can be maintained by adjusting the phase shift angle ϕ, offering strong
voltage adaptability (e.g., during new energy vehicle charging, as
battery voltage rises from 200V to 800V, DAB can maintain stable output
power by adjusting ϕ).
4. Application Scenarios: Differences in Unidirectional/Bidirectional Flow and Power Level
Application
scenarios are the core design targets, primarily determined by power
flow direction, power level, and system requirements.
- LLC Topology:
- Primary Applications: Scenarios requiring unidirectional power transfer, high power density, and low EMI, such as:
- Data center power supplies (AC/DC isolation stage);
- Vehicle On-Board Chargers (OBCs) (DC/DC isolation stage, unidirectional charging);
- Energy storage systems (isolation between battery and grid).
- Power Level:
Typically used for medium to high power (10kW - 100kW), e.g., 6.6kW,
11kW versions for vehicle OBCs, 20kW - 50kW power supplies for data
centers.
- DAB Topology:
- Primary Applications: Scenarios requiring bidirectional power transfer, wide voltage range, and high reliability, such as:
- Bidirectional charging for new energy vehicles (OBC reverse feed, vehicle-to-grid discharge);
- Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS, bidirectional energy exchange between battery and grid);
- Microgrids (bidirectional connection between distributed generation and the grid).
- Power Level:
Typically used for low to medium power (3kW - 22kW), e.g., 3.3kW, 6.6kW
bidirectional versions for vehicle OBCs, 10kW - 50kW bidirectional
power sources for energy storage systems.
5. Control Complexity: Difficulty of Frequency Regulation vs. Phase Shift Control
Control
complexity directly affects system reliability and cost, mainly
reflected in control algorithms, sensor requirements, and dynamic
response.
- LLC Topology:
- Control Complexity:
High. Requires precise control of the switching frequency f_s to keep
it near the resonant frequency f_r (typically deviation ≤ 1%), otherwise
efficiency drops sharply. Additionally, it requires compensation for
the impact of input voltage fluctuations and load changes on the
resonant frequency, making the control algorithm more complex (e.g., PID
+ frequency modulation).
- Sensor Requirements:
Requires high-frequency current sensors (to detect resonant current)
and voltage sensors (to detect input/output voltage) to adjust the
switching frequency in real-time.
- DAB Topology:
- Control Complexity:
Low. Only requires adjustment of the phase shift angle ϕ to achieve
power flow control. The control algorithm is simple (e.g., Single Phase
Shift - SPS, Dual Phase Shift - DPS control).
- Sensor Requirements:
Requires phase sensors (to detect phase difference between bridge arms)
and current sensors (to detect leakage inductance current) to optimize
soft-switching performance.
6. Summary of Advantages and Disadvantages: Key Differences
For a clearer comparison, the advantages and disadvantages of both are summarized below:
7. Conclusion: How to Choose?
Choosing
between LLC and DAB topology depends on the core requirements of the
application scenario (unidirectional/bidirectional, power level, voltage
adaptability, EMI requirements):
- If unidirectional power transfer, high power density, and low EMI are required (e.g., data center power supplies, unidirectional charging for vehicle OBCs), choose the LLC topology.
- If bidirectional power transfer, wide voltage range, and high reliability
are required (e.g., bidirectional charging for new energy vehicles,
bidirectional energy exchange in energy storage systems), choose the DAB topology.
For
example, unidirectional vehicle OBC versions (6.6kW, 11kW) typically
use the LLC topology, while bidirectional OBCs (3.3kW, 6.6kW) use the
DAB topology; the AC/DC isolation stage in data centers (20kW-50kW) uses
LLC, while the DC/DC isolation stage in energy storage systems
(10kW-50kW) uses DAB.