H
HC
Guest
Hey, all, I want to build a homemade inverter to convert a DC source
into AC. Ultimately I would like to try to build a grid-tie inverter
(240 VAC in the US), but in the meantime I hope to get a better
understanding of AC and just simply build a small unit (where I won't
care what the input voltage is or the output voltage is; probably 6-12
VDC input, and similar output but as AC) with that purpose in mind.
I'm sorry this is so long; it covers an area I do not yet understand
well and I want to explain what I don't know (as well as I can) and
what I've tried.
I'm frustrated at my lack of understanding of the basics of AC and I
am trying to gain that understanding through hands-on work (reading
books on electronics (Understanding Basic Electronics is finished and
I'm about 1/4 through Basic Electronics Theory) hasn't answered my
questions).. I get that AC switches directions, but I built an H-
bridge to switch a 6 VDC source and it has no negative signal portion
(according to my oscilloscope) but when I hook up the 'scope to a 12
VAC wall-wart it DOES have negative signal portions; both have two
wires, both are supposed to be alternating but one is zero-line and
above, one has negative and positive signal portions. There's gotta
be something basic I'm not grasping.
So, in an attempt to learn this and to build the inverter I ultimately
want I have built this (Thanks to Tony van Roon for his site):
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~antoon/circ/555dcac.html (without the
transformer; I just wanted to see the signal output) and it gives me
AC with negative signal portions. Since it runs the output through a
capacitor, would it be correct to think that ALL the current that
flows out of this device will have to pass "through" the capacitor (I
mean, it wouldn't really go through it but it would run into it then
out of it cyclically, and the current output would seem to be limited
by it)? If that is correct, would that mean that the maximum current
output of this type of inverter would be limited by three items: VDC
supply, TIP41 (or whichever power transistor is used) AND the 2700 uF
capacitor? The part there that is a big question for me is the
possible current limiting of the capacitor (I can figure out what the
current capacity of my supply and the transistor are, that's easy;
I've never seen a capacitor marked for it's current carrying
capability). I mean, ultimately, I will need to know how much current
this setup can produce.
I tried the H-bridge, but while I get a pulsed output, it's all zero-
line and above, never a negative output. I thought about using an H-
bridge with 4 power transistors and feeding one side a sine-wave maybe
from a function generator, and the other side a similar signal but 180
degrees out of phase. I would think that would swing the voltage
across the bridge in a wave similar to the wave of the function
generator. But, since a square-wave H-bridge didn't yield a negative
portion of the signal I'm pretty sure that doing something like making
it swing slowly from one polarity to another won't do it, either.
I found a schematic for a dual-voltage supply on that site:
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~antoon/circ/741-ps.html which might be useful
for my purposes; to maybe use the zero volt output as the reference,
and then try to swing an output from +12VDC to -12VDC. I could feed
the input transformer the square-wave "pulsed" DC I can generate with
an H-bridge. I would still need a way to gently switch the output
from + to - but maybe I could put a totem pole of complementary power
transistors on it and feed it a sine wave (the "unified" base). That
would give me the gentle swing from from + to - (maybe), and the 0
volt line would be the "neutral". Ultimately I could feed that output
into a transformer to step it up to the line voltage I'll finally go
for. In theory, I could parallel several voltage regulators to
increase current capacity, and several power transistors to get the
power output I want (5-10 amps). I don't have a center-tapped
transformer (yet) to play with so I can't try this (yet).
Thanks for your help.
--HC
into AC. Ultimately I would like to try to build a grid-tie inverter
(240 VAC in the US), but in the meantime I hope to get a better
understanding of AC and just simply build a small unit (where I won't
care what the input voltage is or the output voltage is; probably 6-12
VDC input, and similar output but as AC) with that purpose in mind.
I'm sorry this is so long; it covers an area I do not yet understand
well and I want to explain what I don't know (as well as I can) and
what I've tried.
I'm frustrated at my lack of understanding of the basics of AC and I
am trying to gain that understanding through hands-on work (reading
books on electronics (Understanding Basic Electronics is finished and
I'm about 1/4 through Basic Electronics Theory) hasn't answered my
questions).. I get that AC switches directions, but I built an H-
bridge to switch a 6 VDC source and it has no negative signal portion
(according to my oscilloscope) but when I hook up the 'scope to a 12
VAC wall-wart it DOES have negative signal portions; both have two
wires, both are supposed to be alternating but one is zero-line and
above, one has negative and positive signal portions. There's gotta
be something basic I'm not grasping.
So, in an attempt to learn this and to build the inverter I ultimately
want I have built this (Thanks to Tony van Roon for his site):
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~antoon/circ/555dcac.html (without the
transformer; I just wanted to see the signal output) and it gives me
AC with negative signal portions. Since it runs the output through a
capacitor, would it be correct to think that ALL the current that
flows out of this device will have to pass "through" the capacitor (I
mean, it wouldn't really go through it but it would run into it then
out of it cyclically, and the current output would seem to be limited
by it)? If that is correct, would that mean that the maximum current
output of this type of inverter would be limited by three items: VDC
supply, TIP41 (or whichever power transistor is used) AND the 2700 uF
capacitor? The part there that is a big question for me is the
possible current limiting of the capacitor (I can figure out what the
current capacity of my supply and the transistor are, that's easy;
I've never seen a capacitor marked for it's current carrying
capability). I mean, ultimately, I will need to know how much current
this setup can produce.
I tried the H-bridge, but while I get a pulsed output, it's all zero-
line and above, never a negative output. I thought about using an H-
bridge with 4 power transistors and feeding one side a sine-wave maybe
from a function generator, and the other side a similar signal but 180
degrees out of phase. I would think that would swing the voltage
across the bridge in a wave similar to the wave of the function
generator. But, since a square-wave H-bridge didn't yield a negative
portion of the signal I'm pretty sure that doing something like making
it swing slowly from one polarity to another won't do it, either.
I found a schematic for a dual-voltage supply on that site:
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~antoon/circ/741-ps.html which might be useful
for my purposes; to maybe use the zero volt output as the reference,
and then try to swing an output from +12VDC to -12VDC. I could feed
the input transformer the square-wave "pulsed" DC I can generate with
an H-bridge. I would still need a way to gently switch the output
from + to - but maybe I could put a totem pole of complementary power
transistors on it and feed it a sine wave (the "unified" base). That
would give me the gentle swing from from + to - (maybe), and the 0
volt line would be the "neutral". Ultimately I could feed that output
into a transformer to step it up to the line voltage I'll finally go
for. In theory, I could parallel several voltage regulators to
increase current capacity, and several power transistors to get the
power output I want (5-10 amps). I don't have a center-tapped
transformer (yet) to play with so I can't try this (yet).
Thanks for your help.
--HC