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Registered Member #18516
Joined: Sat May 18 2013, 09:09AM
Location: Lancashire, UK
Posts: 38
I've been trying to get my head round the voltage rating for an MMC in a DRSSTC.
I think its related to the period of the resonant frequency and the number of cycles completed during the on time? I read it somewhere and i have it in my head, but i cant remember where.
So in a full bridge your switching between +Vbus and -Vbus, each cycle the voltage will increase by V?
So with a resonant frequency of say 150khz, one cycle takes 6.66 us. If we have an on time of say 100us, then you'll get 15 cycles of rise, and thus the cap bank will be at 15*Vbus?
How much of an overhead should i apply to this calculated value to get the MMC rating? EG if my bus voltage is 380v, in the above example i'd get 5.7kv. So should i build the MMC to 6? or some larger value?
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
The ESR should normally be so small compared to the capacitive part of the impedance, that you can neglect it with no ill effects.
The rule of thumb I suggested was actually 10 * (4/pi) * DC bus voltage, IIRC. That's the peak voltage you would expect in a tank circuit with a loaded Q of 10.
Registered Member #1403
Joined: Tue Mar 18 2008, 06:05PM
Location: Denmark, Odense C
Posts: 1968
Thanks Steve, almost as I remembered it ;)
I added the ESR rating to the calculator, so that if someone plotted in a data for a unsuitable capacitor with a high ESR, alarm bells should ring when looking at the numbers. We can argue that people that do not know about a too high ESR value will not interpret the results correct, maybe some day I will add more automation and guide help to the calculator. In web 3.0 maybe.
Trhough talks with Kizmo and Dalus on the IRC chat, we concluded that tank capacitor size is only limited by your wealth.
The resonant frequency of some size Tesla coil is often in the same league as most others, a medium is around 50-100kHz, a large under 40kHz etc.
So with larger capacitance you have more energy to dump into the arc, thus getting fatter and brighter arcs with more energy. But the peak currents also get higher as the primary impedance have to be lower to be in the same league of resonant frequency.
Higher peak currents means higher voltage over the MMC, high voltage and large capacitance MMC is a costly affair.
I think Dalus used 1 uF in his large coil and Kizmo might have experimented with 1,5 uF.
Not the most scientific explanation, but more from experience and talks.
The rule of thumb I suggested was actually 10 * (4/pi) * DC bus voltage, IIRC. That's the peak voltage you would expect in a tank circuit with a loaded Q of 10.
That's a gamble. Loaded Q can be much larger during a ground strike or if your coil is out of tune. It's better to use an OCD set to some value and go by Mads equations.
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
Uspring wrote ...
That's a gamble. Loaded Q can be much larger during a ground strike or if your coil is out of tune. It's better to use an OCD set to some value and go by Mads equations.
The rule of thumb is one possible way of choosing the tank capacitor voltage rating at the design stage. In operation, you should indeed set the OCD to limit the tank voltage to below whatever voltage rating you decided on.
My coils MMC is rated at about 30*Vbus and I need all of that. This is probably due to my way of running it. In particular long bursts and I'm not using PLL magic to avoid the primary current peak.
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