4.1 INTRODUCTION
In the Chapter 3, it has been shown that AC supply of inductive or capacitive loads can be achieved very satisfactorily (high efficiency, low distortion). It has also been shown that the performance of these resonant inverters was tightly linked to the commutation process in these switching devices all of which execute one controlled switching and one inherent switching.
We will define as a soft-commutated direct converter a converter only involving switches, each of these switches having at most one controlled switching and at least one inherent switching, the controlled and inherent switchings being if necessary different from one switch to another. So the soft commutation is not compatible with totally controlled switches. In soft-commutated converters the power transfer is controlled by means of switches or by a set of switches with thyristor or dual thyristor switching features.
The term 'soft commutation' is legitimate since those switches that have one controlled switching and one inherent switching can be fitted with lossless snubbers (a series inductor when turn on is controlled or a parallel capacitor when turn off is controlled) so that the switching losses are considerably reduced.