2025-12-09 00:00:00
Duyệt qua:
The Solid-State Transformer (SST), as a power electronic conversion device designed to replace traditional line-frequency transformers, employs a 'power electronic conversion + medium-frequency transformer' structure. It offers significant advantages in efficiency, power density, and control flexibility, but its design difficulty increases substantially accordingly. This article systematically analyzes its core design challenges and key technical points based on the latest industry practices in 2025.
A typical SST adopts a three-stage power conversion structure:
The design challenges of SST mainly focus on the contradictory unification of high frequency, high voltage, and high power density, manifesting in six industry-recognized key difficulties.
1. Medium-Voltage Insulation Requirements 'Do Not Decrease with Frequency'
High-frequency
operation does not reduce insulation requirements. The MFT must fully
meet line-frequency 42 kV/1 min withstand voltage and 75 kV lightning
impulse insulation level (BIL). According to the IEC 62477-2 standard,
the minimum creepage distance for the 10 kV voltage level needs to be
≥32 mm, and the clearance ≥16 mm. These safety distance requirements
occupy about 40% of the transformer's volume. More critically, the
high-frequency electric field concentration effect can reduce the
partial discharge (PD) inception voltage by approximately 30%,
especially at the epoxy resin-air interface. A composite insulation
structure combining shielding layers with Vacuum Pressure Impregnation
(VPI) must be employed for suppression.
2. Multidimensional Superimposition of High-Frequency Losses
Within the 20–100 kHz range, loss mechanisms are complex and severe:
3. Precision of Leakage Inductance as a Key Control Parameter
In
the DAB topology, the transformer leakage inductance (Lσ) is a key
control parameter for power transfer. The power transfer formula is:
P = (n·V₁·V₂)/(8·f·Lσ) · φ(1 − φ/π)
where
φ is the phase-shift angle. The industry requires the leakage
inductance value to be controlled within a ±5% tolerance range. Winding
one turn more or less can cause the parameter to exceed specifications,
leading to system instability. Therefore, using a shell-type (E-core)
magnetic core structure combined with segmented interleaved winding
methods has become the mainstream solution in 2025 for precise leakage
inductance control.
4. Lack of Technical Standards for 10 kV Hot-Swap
For
application scenarios like data centers that pursue extremely high
availability, customers require the ability to replace faulty modules
online on the medium-voltage side (10 kV). However, there is currently a
lack of mature commercial 10 kV hot-swap connector solutions and
related national standards in the market, necessitating complete system
shutdown for maintenance, which is an obstacle to large-scale
application.
5. Stringent Requirements for Modular Series Voltage Balancing Accuracy
To
handle high input voltage, an Input-Series Output-Parallel (ISOP)
modular architecture is often adopted. If 10 modules are connected in
series, a voltage balancing accuracy deviation of just 1% can cause the
leading module to withstand over 200 V of extra voltage, easily leading
to device overvoltage breakdown. Achieving voltage balancing requires
high-speed control, typically demanding a voltage balancing loop
bandwidth of 1 kHz, and inter-module synchronization via optical fiber
with a delay of less than 50 ns.
6. The 'Three Major Cost Barriers'
To address the above challenges, the following validated design key points have been established.
1. Optimized Design of Medium Frequency Transformer (MFT)
2. Power Semiconductors and Drive Protection
3. System-Level Reliability and Redundancy
Industry consensus is that the 800 V DC bus-based data center power architecture is expected to move towards large-scale adoption by 2027, but this is predicated on completely resolving the 10 kV hot-swap technology and long-term reliability verification issues.
SST design is essentially about finding the optimal solution under the triple constraints of high-frequency losses, insulation safety distances, and heat dissipation capability. The feasible path for 2025 is clear: 'Nanocrystalline shell-type core + segmented interleaved winding + composite insulation with micro-channel cooling.' Following this route for selection and design, an engineering prototype can be completed in approximately 4 weeks, achieving advanced laboratory indicators of 98.3% efficiency and 1.25 kW/L power density, paving the way for the final commercialization of SST. In the future, reducing MFT cost (currently accounting for about 18% of SST BOM cost) and perfecting medium-voltage hot-swap standards will be the focus of industrial research and development.