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The conventional boost converter is widely used for many different applications in spite of its limitations regarding dynamic performance, due to its right-half-plane zeros, and discontinuous output current. An alternative boost converter based on a capacitive energy transfer has been proposed in the past to overcome the above mentioned drawbacks, being the need of a floating driver its major disadvantage. This paper introduces a new energy transfer principle allowing both to have continuous current and to eliminate the RHP zero without the need of a floating driver. It also compares the new converter with the capacitive energy transfer counter-part and presents B/B stability test results.
Rueda et al. (Thu,) studied this question.