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Registered Member #190
Joined: Fri Feb 17 2006, 12:00AM
Location:
Posts: 1567
I am taking a high voltage sinusoidal wave from my tank capacitor. The voltage can be as high as 600v and the frequency will be 50-150khz.
The voltage goes through a 100k/10w resistor and is clamped at 15v and -0.6v (diode drop). The problem is the output voltage is lagging the input signal. I am guessing this is a shift due to capacitance. The shift is gone if R is very low. The problem is I need a high R to keep the current low due to the high voltage. Is there anything I can do to reduce or eliminate the shift?
otherwise, I can adjust my calculation to account for the shift.
Registered Member #190
Joined: Fri Feb 17 2006, 12:00AM
Location:
Posts: 1567
Using a voltage divider, I believe, won't solve the problem. I will still need a large resistance to keep the current down with the divider, bringing me back to where I started.
Registered Member #72
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 08:29AM
Location: UK St. Albans
Posts: 1659
What are you doing with the signal at the "out" node? Why is phase shift a problem? Why are you clamping the output voltage?
If you are merely taking it to your scope to measure a reduced version of your input voltage, then you need a low value shunt resistor instead of the diodes, making a "voltage divider" with the input resistor. The low value resistor keeps the voltage low, and makes a low impedance to drive whatever stray capacitance you have with low phase shift.
I suspect though that this is a feedback path for your induction heater? What properties do you want it to have? It's easier to design a suitable circuit if we know what it has to do. You might be better off with a pure capacitive divider?
Registered Member #190
Joined: Fri Feb 17 2006, 12:00AM
Location:
Posts: 1567
Ideally:
no phase shift output voltage clamped between 0 and 15v high enough impedance so it does not affect the RLC induction heater tank
signal is going into one of the PLL inputs, which is why I need to clamp the voltage
As I said in the beginning, if the design is too complicated, I can adjust the constant I am using that relates the phase shift of the drive and capacitor tank signal.
I am curious why the shift is more evident with a higher R value?
Registered Member #190
Joined: Fri Feb 17 2006, 12:00AM
Location:
Posts: 1567
What is the purpose of putting the resistor and capacitor in parallel?
Also, Sulaiman, why do I see the shift more with higher resistance values? I would think if I was looking at a vector diagram with R on the horizontal, and C or L on the vertical, the phase shift would be more pronounced when R is smaller.
EDIT:
I have looked up information on phase shift topologies:
If my current voltage divider is the 100K reisistor (R1) and the high imedance of my input device (R2), there is a stray capacitance across my R1 resistor. I am guessing this is more evident at higher R values because the "capacitance" is not being shorted out.
Using this diagram and formula
couldn't I just put a higher C value (translating to a lower Xc) in parallel across my R which will lower ArcTan(R/Xc), and decrease the phase shift?
Registered Member #2099
Joined: Wed Apr 29 2009, 12:22AM
Location: Los Altos, California
Posts: 1716
The lag in your picture could be created by just the capacitance of your oscilloscope probe. 100 k ohms x 12 pF is 1.2 us. In other words, the waveform is different when you aren't looking at it.
For design suggestions, it would help if we knew what your clamped waveform is for. And which current is the one you want to limit.
Along the lines of previously suggested voltage divider: to your circuit as drawn, suppose you add a 10K resistor to ground. Voltage and RC time constant are reduced by a factor of 11, and no current is significantly larger than what you started with.
[edit] >>The problem is I need a high R to keep the current low due to the high voltage. The high voltage is only across the large value series R. In existing circuit with +-600V applied, the clamp diode currents are limited to +- 6 mA and your series R dissipates 1.8 watts. You could reduce the 100K to 22K and not burn it up.
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
The basic solution to the problem is a small capacitor across the 100k, as others have pointed out. However the comment about scope probe capacitance is a valid one too.
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