Revolutionizing Distributed Air Gap Cores

Author:
Chris Spadafora, Product Marketing Magnetics, TDK

Date
01/12/2022

 PDF
Increased power density and optimized efficiency

Click image to enlarge

Figure 1. Temperature comparison @ 50 kHz single gap vs. distributed gaps

It is fascinating to learn about successful companies like Amazon, Apple, Google, HP and Harley Davidson that started in their founders’ garages. Each started as a hobby business, innovating upon decades-old technology, expertly tailoring the technology into custom solutions for their customers. Over time, these companies standardized their customized offerings, gradually becoming Fortune 500 companies.

In a similar vein, the technology behind distributed gap cores has been around for nearly 30 years. Distributed gap cores are primarily used to increase power handling capability, enable higher currents, and improve the efficiency and thermal performance of magnetics. Yet, these solutions have always been an expensive, highly-customized solution – until now. TDK is innovating the standardization of Distributed Air Gap Cores in a way that is revolutionizing how the market will specify, purchase, and adopt these crucial components.

The Need for Air Gap Cores

Ferrite cores with distributed air gaps improve the efficiency and thermal performance of magnetics. They are used in various applications including solar inverters, uninterruptible power supplies, EV charging stations, onboard chargers and DC/DC converters and industrial switch mode powers supplies.

Before Distributed Air Gap Cores were readily available, many engineers would implement designs with a large single air gap. This had several limiting factors because the large fringing flux emitting from the air gaps would spread into the winding area. This leads to copper losses, thereby leading to a rise in temperature and proximity losses in high-frequency magnetics.

As a result, the usable winding area is limited. Distributed Air Gap Cores address these issues by providing the following benefits: 

·  Improved Fringing Flux: Anywhere a gap is present, fringing flux is emitted. When there is a larger gap, there is also a larger fringing flux path. By incorporating a distributed gap the fringing flux losses decrease as the number of smaller air gaps increases. This can reduce the fringing flux losses by up to 70 percent.

·  Increased Power Density and Optimized Efficiency:Distributed air gaps increase the power handling capability of the design. In many cases the winding area is reduced to avoid fringing flux losses. By using distributed gapped cores (minimizing the fringing flux) the full winding area can be used. This can allow for either a smaller component or higher power through the originally selected component.

·  Enhanced Performance:In some cases, Litz wire is used to address the losses generated from fringing flux. Since Distributed Air Gap cores reduce the effects from fringing flux there is the potential to use solid wire instead of Litz wire. This would allow for higher copper utilization of the winding area, resulting in higher efficiency and lower costs.

·  Utilization of New Semiconductor Material: Distributed Air Gap cores are well-suited for applications using higher frequency switching technology like Silicon Carbine and Gallium Nitrates.

Distributed Air Gap Cores have seen significant innovation in the above categories over the past few years. However, each time a solution is created it has been tailored and delivered specifically for the design of the end application.

An unfortunate side effect of this is that each time a core is created for a custom application, it likely will not be used again for another design, increasing the overall cost of the technology, and preventing new innovations from being passed on to others.

Introducing TDK’s Standardized Solutions

Much like Apple, HP and Harley Davidson, TDK has responded to the need for taking this highly customized technology and providing a more standardized solution. A standardized Distributed Air Gap Core portfolio offer reduces the dependence on custom-built offerings, and will revolutionize the Distributed Air Gap Core industry. Such standardized solutions will speed time to market, improve ROI, and stimulate innovation while still allowing for application-specific customization. As a result, TDK recently introduced standardized Distributed Air Gap Core solutions.

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Figure 2.  Hot spot comparison for single gap vs. distributed gaps

 

TDK solutions also offer one of the best total costs of ownership and cost/performance ratios, due to reliability and reduced proximity losses. This becomes extremely apparent when a single gap core is compared to various configurations of distributed air gaps.

In fact, the best cost/performance ratio is achieved with three identical air gaps. Thermal image test comparisons between a single gap when contrasted against three identical distributed gap core sets clearly show significantly lower outputs at varied frequencies.

The TDK Standardization Revolution

As a pioneer in magnetics, TDK is the first to offer standard Distributed Air Gap Core solutions. TDK continues to invest in the future of magnetics and to support this introduction. The company has invested heavily in new automated manufacturing processes and equipment that improve the quality of air gapped core products.

TDK is revolutionizing how the market will specify, purchase, and adopt Distributed Air Gapped Cores with new standardized products. TDK offers the market easy access to a once highly customized distributed gap ferrite core solution. Manufacturing innovation is allowing the industry to take advantage of the technology in new ways. Additional innovation will follow, just as it does whenever a custom solution is standardized. Welcome to the revolution.

 

TDK Electronics

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