P
Phil Hobbs
Guest
On 11/6/20 8:44 PM, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
Seems like you could use the servo to get rid of the DC, if you can
sense the right thing. How about a sort of Royerish idea--can you sense
the nonlinearity of the I(t) curve and make the average of the quadratic
term go away?
Cheers
Phil
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
http://electrooptical.net
http://hobbs-eo.com
On Fri, 06 Nov 2020 17:05:53 -0800, boB <boB@K7IQ.com> wrote:
On Fri, 06 Nov 2020 23:29:05 +0100, Jeroen Belleman
jeroen@nospam.please> wrote:
On 2020-11-06 21:45, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Fri, 06 Nov 2020 12:12:46 -0800, boB <boB@K7IQ.com> wrote:
On Fri, 06 Nov 2020 09:36:10 -0800, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com
wrote:
The goal is a bulletproof 3-phase AC power source, maybe 250
watts/phase, but huge overload capacity for a few seconds. Here\'s my
amp concept for one phase:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/jijl78e026qjbgb/P902B_1.jpg?raw=1
https://www.dropbox.com/s/3rp94pxt2ou70qf/P902B_1.asc?dl=0
Two issues:
The DC blocking cap C4 will be huge, probably 2 or 3 in parallel, 6
volt lytics. They might tolerate a volt or so reverse DC. So I can
take my chances on offset, or servo the DC offset, or something.
The mosfets were just pulled from the LT Spice list. I\'ll have to find
some monster TO247s that can\'t be blown up. But I don\'t trust any
mosfet substrate diode model. Should I add schottky diodes across the
fets? Maybe two surface-mount SMB diodes per fet?
Looks pretty good. Why are you using a coupling capacitor again ? I
don\'t think you should need it ? At least from the primary side.
Maybe if a rectified load is connected it might be necessary ?
That\'s easy to simulate.
The toroidal transformer saturates with just a little DC voltage on
the primary. I don\'t know if I could trust a servo circuit to keep the
DC offset low enough.
You don\'t servo the DC voltage to zero, you servo the DC current!
Jeroen Belleman
Yep ! One begets the other !
But volt-seconds balance on the core is what matters.
This can also be a problem on push-pull supplies if the duty cycle
isn\'t 50%
There are different and fun kind of ways to fix this or keep it
centered where it belongs.
Myself, I would rather not have to use a series capacitor but it
probably doesn\'t matter too much as long as that ESR is really low and
doesn\'t get too reverse biased.
If I come off the two outputs, after the LC filters, I can go into a
diffamp and then an integrator. With 1% parts, I can probably keep the
offset below a volt or so. With 0.1% resistors, it would be
correspondingly better, a fraction of a volt. Still too much for the
transformer.
I tested some candidate 10mF 6.3 volt caps. At 1 or 1.5 volts reverse
bias, leakage current is low and declining, maybe 40 uA after a while.
At 2 volts, it\'s 200 uA and increasing. I think increasing is bad.
Posting about things like, and getting peoples opinions, helps me
think.
Kinda crazy, 5 or so giant caps to keep DC out of my transformer, and
a servo circuit to protect the caps.
Seems like you could use the servo to get rid of the DC, if you can
sense the right thing. How about a sort of Royerish idea--can you sense
the nonlinearity of the I(t) curve and make the average of the quadratic
term go away?
Cheers
Phil
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
http://electrooptical.net
http://hobbs-eo.com