Planar magnetic element

Inductor devices – Coil or coil turn supports or spacers – Printed circuit-type coil

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C336S083000, C336S232000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06404317

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a planar magnetic element such as a planar inductor or a planar transformer.
2. Description of the Related Art
In recent years, electronic equipment of various types have been miniaturized. Magnetic elements such as inductors and transformers, which are indispensable to the power-supply section of each electronic component, can neither be made smaller nor be integrated with the other circuit components, whereas the other circuit sections have successfully been made much smaller in the form of LSIs. Therefore the ratio of the volume of the power-supply section to that of the other sections, combined together, has increased inevitably.
To reduce the sizes of the magnetic elements, such as inductors and transformers, attempts at reduction have been made, and small planar inductors and planar transformers have been achieved. A conventional-planar inductor comprises a spiral planar coil, two insulation layers sandwiching the coil, and two magnetic plates sandwiching the coil and insulation layers. A conventional planar transformer comprises two spiral planar coils, used as primary and secondary windings, respectively, two insulation layers sandwiching these coils, and two magnetic layers sandwiching the coils and insulation layers. The spiral planar coils incorporated in the inductor and the transformer can be of either of the two alternative types. The first type is formed of one spiral conductor. The second type comprised of an insulation layer and two spiral conductors mounted on the two major surfaces of the insulation layer, for generating magnetic fields which extend in the same direction.
These planar elements are disclosed in K. Yamasawa et al,
High
-
Frequency of a Planar
-
Type Microtransformer and Its Application to Multilayered Switching Regulators,
IEEE Trans. Mag., Vol. 26, No. 3, May 1990, pp. 1204-1209. As is described in this thesis, the planar elements have a large power loss. Similar planar magnetic elements are disclosed also in U.S. Pat. No. 4,803,609.
It has been proposed that the thin-film process, is employed in order to miniaturize these planar magnetic elements.
Planar inductors of the structure specified above need to have a sufficient quality coefficient Q in the frequency band for which they are used. Planar transformers of the structure described above must have a predetermined gain G which is greater than 1 for raising the input voltage or less than 1 for lowering the input voltage, and must also minimize voltage fluctuation.
The value Q of a planar inductor is:
Q=&ohgr;L/R
where R is the resistance of the coil, and L is the inductance of the inductor.
The voltage gain G of a planar transformer without load is:
G=k
(
L
2
/L
1
)
½
{Q
/(1
+Q
2
)
½
}
where k is the coupling factor between the primary and secondary windings, L
1
and L
2
are the inductances of the primary and secondary windings, respectively, the quality coefficient Q is &ohgr; L
1
/R
1
, and R
1
is the resistance of the primary-winding coil. The gain G is virtually proportional to Q when Q<<1, and has a constant value k (L
2
/L
1
)
½
when Q>>1.
To increase the quality coefficient Q of the inductor, and to increase the gain G of the transformer thereby to limit the voltage fluctuation, it is necessary to reduce the resistance of, and increase the inductance of, the coil, as much as possible. In the conventional planar magnetic elements made by means of the thin-film process, however, the coil conductors, which need to be formed in a plane, cannot have a large cross-sectional area. Therefore, these elements cannot help but have a very high resistance and an extremely small inductance. Consequently, the conventional planar inductor has an insufficient quality coefficient Q, and the conventional planar transformer has an insufficient gain G and a great voltage fluctuation. These drawbacks of the conventional planar magnetic elements have been a bar to the practical use of these elements.
Of planar coils which can be used in planar inductors, spiral coils are the most preferable due to their great inductance and their great quality coefficient Q. In fact, planar inductors, each having a spiral planar coil, have have been manufactured, one of which is schematically illustrated in FIG.
1
. As
FIG. 1
shows, the planar inductor comprises a spiral planar coil shaped like a square plate, two polyimide films sandwiching the coil, and two Co-base amorphous alloy ribbons sandwiching the coil and the polyimide films and prepared by cutting a Co-based amorphous alloy foil made by rapidly quenching cooling the melted alloy. This planar inductor is incorporated in an output choke coil for use in a 5 V-2 W DC-DC converter of step-down chopper-type, as is disclosed in N. Sahashi et al, Amorphous Planar Inductor for Small Power Supplies, the National Convention Record, the Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan 1989, S. 18-5-3. As is evident from the graph of
FIG. 2A
, two currents flow through this choke coil. The first current is a DC current which corresponds to the load current. The second current is an AC current which has been generated by the operation of a semiconductor switch. As the DC current increases, the operating point of the soft magnetic core, shifts into the saturation region of the B-H curve. As a result, the magnetic permeability of the magnetic alloy lowers, whereby the inductance abruptly decreases as is illustrated in FIG.
2
B. As is evident from
FIG. 3
, the AC current becomes too large at the time the inductance sharply decreases. This excessive AC current is a stress to the semiconductor switch, and may break down the switch in some cases.
It is desired that the choke coil have its electric characteristics, such as inductance, unchanged even if a superimposed DC current flows through it.
FIG. 4
is a graph representing the typical superimposed DC current characteristic of the choke coil, which is the relationship between the inductance of an inductor and a superimposed DC current flowing through the inductor.
In the case of a planar inductor, the conductor coil is very close to the soft magnetic cores and, hence, generates an intense magnetic field even if the current flowing through it is rather small. Thus, the soft magnetic cores are likely to undergo magnetic saturation. It will be explained how such magnetic saturation occurs in, for example, a planar inductor which comprises an Al—Cu alloy spiral planar coil, two insulation layers sandwiching the coil, and two magnetic layers clamping the coil and the insulation layers together.
The planar coil of this planar inductor is made of an conductor having a width of 50 &mgr;m and a thickness of 10 &mgr;m. The coil has 20 turns, and the gap between any two adjacent turns is 10 &mgr;m. Each insulation layer has a thickness of 1 &mgr;m, and either magnetic layer has a thickness of 5 &mgr;m. The planar coil has a saturated magnetic flux density B
S
of 15 kG and a magnetic permeability &mgr;
s
of 5000.
Assuming that the Al—Cu alloy conductor has a permissible current density of 5×108 A/m
2
, the permissible current Imax is 250 mA. The present inventors tested the planar inductor in order to determine the relationship between the current flowing through the coil and the intensity of the magnetic field generated in the surface of either magnetic layer from the current. The results of the test revealed that both magnetic layers were magnetically saturated when a current of 48 mA or more flowed through the Al—Cu alloy coil. It follows that, if this planar inductor is used as a choke coil, the maximum DC superimposed current is limited to 48 mA. This value is no more than about one fifth of the permissible coil current Imax. Inevitably, the magnetic layers will be readily saturated magnetically.
The limited DC superimposed current is a drawback which is serious, not only in the planar inductor used as a choke coil, but also in a planar transformer. In a planar transformer

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Planar magnetic element does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Planar magnetic element, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Planar magnetic element will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2952293

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.