series resanance converter pspice
circuit waves is not true
What is wrong?
i dont think its practical to simulate resonant converters as the sim time is too long.
SPICE simulators are a good tool to simulate different aspects of power converter behaviour to my opinion. You get valuable insights in a fair simulation time, some minutes at maximum, a few ten seconds in typical cases.
Of course, the simulation setup should be choosen appropriately. It's not about a "very simplified" setup rather than a suitable level of abstraction. According to the schematic, cokokerem did this by using SPICE switches instead of real transistors. This setup implies, that you are not interested to evaluate transistor switching behaviour (e.g. current rise time and switching losses) in this case rather than overall behaviour of the converter.
I have done a lot of similar simulations, e.g. of resonant converters or multiphase PWM converters, including PWM generation and control loops.
PS.: I see three points, that unsuitale for a real resonant converter, to my opinion.
1. The resonant circuit impedance is too high, I would scale it down e.g. by a factor of 10.
2. A loss resistance, always present in a real circuit and required for stable operation should be added.
3. The converter should be driven somewhat below the series resonance.
I got meaningful waveforms with F=95k, LR=3uH, CR=0.8uF, RR=0.05
PPS: The said F < fr dimensioning causes a small dead-time in resonant circuit current. It's also usual, to blank the switch drive during this interval. This mainly creates a margin for resonant frequency variation and avoids high current transients. Duty cycle ramping furthermore is a means in starting the resonant converter with limited current.