At least one embodiment of the invention generally relates to an adapter for producing an electrically-conductive connection between at least one main current path of a switching device and an evaluation unit for determining the state of a protective device which is connected upstream of the switching device.
At least one embodiment of the invention further generally relates to an evaluation unit for determining the state of a protective device connected upstream of a switching device with at least one main current path, a communication module for a switching device with at least one main current path for communication with the switching device and a control for the switching device over at least one communication connection in each case and/or a system comprising a switching device and a protective device connected upstream of this which are able to be connected via at least one main current path, an adapter and an evaluation unit.
An adapter or a system is used in particular for load branches, such as motor starters for example. Switching devices for load branches are used in switching systems for example which as a rule are protected from short circuits at a number of levels (feed, distribution, loads). In such cases the state of the motor starter for example is characterized by the activation of the switching device, for example a contactor, by the feedback of the controlled switching device state as well as by the notification of the state of the at least one upstream protective device, which can be a power switch, a fuse or an overvoltage protection relay.
The underlying problem is that, as a result of the typical configuration in the switching cabinet, outlay for the cabling of these signals arises, since each branch requires six lines, either directly to a control, such as a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC), for the switching device, or to a communication interface connected to the PLC via a communication link such as a field bus system or a point-to-point connection for example. Even if communication systems are used to save cabling there must still be cabling to the protective device. In this case the state of the protective device is notified by an additional auxiliary switch on the protective device, but this does not detect the presence of a voltage at the switching device however. The high cabling outlay makes these conventional solutions not only time-consuming and costly, but they also conceal a possible source of errors within the cabling.
At least one embodiment of the invention specifies an adapter for a switching device which allows monitoring of a protective device connected upstream from the switching device with minimal cabling outlay.
At least one embodiment of the invention also specifies an evaluation unit, a communication module, a switching device and/or a system comprising a switching device, a protective device connected upstream thereof, an adapter and an evaluation unit.
At least one embodiment is directed to an adapter for producing an electrically-conductive connection between at least one main current path of a switching device and an evaluation unit for determining the state of a protective device connected upstream of the switching device, with the adapter being able to be mechanically connected to the switching device and having contact interfaces for connecting the evaluation unit.
At least one embodiment is directed to an evaluation unit, a communication module, a switching device and/or a system.
In at least one embodiment, the at least one main current path of the switching device is connected via an electrically-conductive connection to a respective contact interface at the adapter. The evaluation unit can then be connected at these contact interfaces (contact points, surfaces or locations), e.g. as an additional module, with no or only with small changes at the switching device. In this case the state of the protective device can be determined by the evaluation unit by measuring a voltage on the at least one main current path. This is the simplest method of obtaining the additional information that a voltage is present at the switching device. By this direct evaluation of the switching state of the protective organ at the switching device the previously required cabling to an additional auxiliary switch is dispensed with, with a possible source of faults being minimized along with the cabling outlay. To this end the proposed solution is also independent of the spatial layout (branch or row-oriented) in a switching cabinet and, with small changes on the switching device, also independent of the connection technology.
In an advantageous form of the embodiment the adapter has at least one connecting lug for tapping the at least one main current path in a connection area. The tapping in the connection area, in which the cables to a load or a protective device are connected for example, means that with this embodiment of the adapter no changes are required to the switching device. However the adapter must be adapted here to the type of connection to be used.
In a further advantageous embodiment, the adapter has at least one spring element for tapping the at least one main current path by a recess provided in the switching device in each case for the insertion of the at least one spring element. Although this does require a small change to be made to the switching device, it makes this solution independent of the type of connection used, such as screw terminal, spring-loaded terminal or fast-on connector.
The invention is described and explained in more detail below on the basis of the example embodiments shown in the figures. The figures are as follows:
Both adapters 1 have three terminal lugs 3 for tapping three main current paths, with the tapping in the connection area meaning that no changes are required at the switching device. The evaluation unit, which determines the state of a protective device connected upstream from the switching device, by way of a voltage measurement for example, can be connected to the contact interface for the evaluation unit 2 (i.e. different adapters 1, but common contact interfaces for the evaluation unit 2).
Tapping by way of the spring elements 4 means however with this embodiment that small changes to the switching device 8 are necessary, since this must have suitable cutouts for the spring elements 4. For this reason the adapter solution shown in these figures is independent of the connection type (e.g. screw terminal, spring-loaded terminal or fast-on connector).
In summary, at least one embodiment of the invention relates to an adapter for establishing an electrically-conductive connection between at least one main current path of a switching device and an evaluation unit for determining the state of a protective device connected upstream of the switching device. To enable the protective device connected upstream of the switching device to be monitored with minimal cabling outlay, an adapter is proposed for establishing an electrically-conductive connection between at least one main current path of a switching device and an evaluation unit for determining the state of a protective device connected upstream of the switching device, with the adapter being connected mechanically to the switching device and featuring contact interfaces for connecting the evaluation unit. The direct evaluation of the switching state of the protective organ at the switching device means that previously required cabling to an additional auxiliary switch on the protective device is dispensed with, with the minimized cabling outlay also minimizing a possible source of faults.
Example embodiments being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
This application is the national phase under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of PCT International Application No. PCT/DE2006/001683 which has an International filing date of Sep. 21, 2006, which designated the United States of America, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2006/001683 | 9/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/24/2009 |