This application claims benefit of the filing date of German Application No. DE 10 2008 054 939.8-34, filed Dec. 18, 2008, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field
Disclosed herein is a current-compensated choke having a ring core and at least two coils each having the same number of windings, and a method for producing a current-compensated choke of this type.
2. Description of Related Art
Chokes are inductive components in electrical engineering and electronics, which are used among other things in the suppression of interference pulses. A very widespread subtype of suppressor chokes, for example, for suppressing interference currents that occur in the same direction in the outgoing lead and the return line, are current-compensated chokes, which are also known as “common mode chokes.” Current-compensated chokes are characterized by several, but at least two coils, which are flowed through in the opposite direction by operating current. As a result, with ideal coils, i.e., coils that are completely symmetrical to one another with the same number of windings, the same sector and the same wire guide, the magnetic fields of the coils in the core of the choke cancel one another, so that the choke has a low inductance for the operating current, while the inductance of the choke for the interference currents occurring in the same direction is high. Deviations from an ideal, completely symmetrical coil lead to losses with the increasing frequency of the operating current, which losses are to be kept as low as possible.
The design of current-compensated chokes is subject to a number of geometric and electromagnetic conditions. In order to keep the ohmic losses low, the wires used for the coil are selected to be as thick as possible. In order to achieve high inductances for interference currents in the same direction, the winding is carried out as a rule on a toroidal magnetic core, which should be as small as possible, however, because of various installation conditions. However, at the same time the individual coil should thereby comprise as many windings as possible. The galvanic isolation between the coils is also essential. Wires of the individual coils, the windings of which all have to be guided through the center hole of the toroidal magnetic core, must therefore be prevented from touching one another.
These geometric and electromagnetic conditions generally make it necessary to wind current-compensated chokes by hand or using hand operated mechanical traction devices and similar mechanical aids, e.g., crochet needles. However, it is virtually impossible to achieve exactly symmetrical coils with a manual winding technique of this type. Despite the high production expense, cross-overs between the wires of individual windings and inaccuracies in the guide of the wires can often occur.
Accordingly, there remains a need to improve the symmetry of the coils with a current-compensated choke without increasing expense.
One or more of these advantages are achieved by the various embodiments disclosed herein. An embodiment of a current-compensated choke described herein comprises a ring core and an even number of, but at least two, coils composed in each case of the same number of windings, wherein further in the interior of the ring core a non-conductive body is arranged with holes embodied in pairs in a mirror symmetrical manner to a symmetry axis of the ring core. Respectively one winding is thereby guided through each hole of at least some of the pairs of symmetrical holes, and windings corresponding to one another of coils assigned to one another are guided through the two holes comprising a pair.
More particularly, an embodiment of a current-compensated choke disclosed a current-compensated choke comprising: a ring core, comprising a solid ring having an outer circumference and an inner circumference surrounding an interior space; at least a first coil and a second coil each of which are wound about the ring core, and each comprising the same number of windings of a conductor; and a non-conductive body disposed within the interior space of the ring core and provided with a first set of holes and a second set of holes, each hole extending from a first surface to a second surface of the non-conductive body, wherein each hole of the first set of holes opposes a corresponding hole of the second set of holes to form opposing pairs in a mirror symmetrical manner relative to a symmetry axis of the ring core, wherein at least one winding of the first coil passes through one of the first set of holes, and at least one winding of the second coil passes through one of the second set of holes forming an opposing pair with the hole of the winding of the first coil.
The ring core thereby serves as a carrier structure onto which the coils are applied directly or indirectly.
In another embodiment is described a method for providing a current-compensated choke, comprising:
The tensile force can be applied to the first wire section either before or after the guiding of the second wire section through the holes.
Various specific embodiments are described in more detail below based on the exemplary embodiments shown in the figures of the drawing; unless stated otherwise, identical components are labeled in all of the figures with the same reference numbers.
As used herein, the term “coils assigned to one another” means the coils with magnetic fields which are to compensate one another respectively when the coils are flowed through with the operating current, thus which ideally are designed completely symmetrically to one another. This symmetry also establishes which windings of the coils correspond to one another; in general, however, this correspondence can also be determined by counting in the same direction the windings of coils corresponding to one another. In the case of symmetrical coils with N windings, the windings that are assigned the same ordinal number n where 1≦n≦N during counting will thereby correspond to one another.
It is therefore provided, according to the embodiments disclosed herein, to exactly stipulate the course of the individual windings in each case, in that their starting point and ending point are established in a defined manner and so that each winding is tightened as it is created or after only one or two additional windings are created. Through the tightening of the individual windings in the course of the production process, the shortest possible connection is then produced, taking into account the geometric conditions. In the case of a symmetrical arrangement of the holes in pairs and the stipulation of the same geometric conditions for these pairs of holes, in particular through the geometry of the ring core and the geometric embodiment of the non-conductive body, the exact symmetry of the individual windings assigned to one another of the coils compensating one another and thus symmetry of the total coils is thereby guaranteed. In particular, an undesired crossing of coils is reduced or excluded.
A particularly simple embodiment of the non-conductive body is a disk arranged in the interior of the ring core, that is, a disk with a smaller radius than the internal radius of the ring core, the planar, circular area of which disk runs parallel to the direction in which an internal radius vector of the ring core extends.
It has furthermore proven to be advantageous in certain embodiments to enclose the ring core with a plastic body composed of at least two parts. Through this measure, an improved stability of the choke body then formed by the ring core and plastic body with respect to the high tensile forces applied, in particular with the use of thick wires for the coils in the production of the choke, can be achieved in a simple manner. Moreover, the effects of environmental influences on the ring core is reduced thereby.
In this case, a very simple assembly of the current-compensated choke is possible when the non-conductive body is connected to one of the parts of the assembled plastic body or is a component of one of the parts of the assembled plastic body which encloses the ring core. An embodiment of the plastic body that is simple to produce lies in particular in an embodiment as two toroidal half-shells that accommodate or enclose the ring core.
Enclosing the ring core in a plastic body having two half-shells which overlap such that they are guided in the inner and outer circumference in a positive manner is particularly effective in protecting the ring core against environmental influences, which with local interaction with parts of the ring core at the respective points could change the magnetic properties thereof and thus impair the function of the current-compensated choke.
Depending on the use, it can be advantageous if: the half shells of the plastic body are connected to one another by an ultrasonic welded seam, which leads to optimum sealing, or when the half shells of the plastic body can be screwed to one another by means of cooperating threads applied on each side, which makes it possible to subsequently open the plastic body, or when the two half shells of the plastic body are connected to one another by a locking mechanism, which makes possible a particularly simple and cost-effective production.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment, guide elements for guiding and separating the windings are arranged on the surface of the plastic body and/or guide elements are inserted into the surface of the plastic body. It is thereby possible to influence the geometric conditions and thus the course of the windings as desired, whereas without guide elements of this type, the shortest connection on the surface of the choke body between the output side of a hole, at which the winding in question begins, and the input side of the next hole, at which it ends, always determines the course of the winding. The guide elements can be realized in particular embodiments as ridges, grooves or a combination of ridges and grooves.
The preferred material for the plastic body is a high-temperature resistant plastic, in particular polyether ether ketone (PEEK) or polyphenylene sulfide (PPS).
The production of the current-compensated choke is particularly simple when the holes in the non-conductive body in at least one direction have an insertion aid conically tapering from the surface of the non-conductive body in the extension direction of the hole.
Due to the magnetic properties that are advantageous for most applications, the preferred material for the ring core of the current-compensated choke is a soft magnetic strip and in particular a soft magnetic strip that contains an amorphous or nanocrystalline alloy. In certain embodiments, the ring core can have an external diameter of at least 20 mm, for example.
Due to its good conduction properties in particular, copper wire has proven to be useful as a material for the coils of certain embodiments of a current-compensated choke of this type. In particular embodiments, the copper wire is preferably varnished and/or has a high-temperature resistant insulation, in particular polyester imide (PEI) or polyimide (PI). In order to be able to conduct the currents occurring in typical cases of use in a low-loss manner, in certain embodiments the copper wire can have a diameter of more than 2 mm.
To insulate the current-compensated choke to the outside, in particular in embodiments using uncoated copper wire, the provision of an insulating coating of a thickness of between 5 and 200 μm (e.g., 5 to 50 μm or 50 to 200 μm) can be advantageous. Such a coating can be obtained, for example, by spraying or dip coating during the production of the current-compensated choke.
The method for producing a current-compensated choke described herein has at least the steps
The method described herein produces a current-compensated choke in a safe and reproducible manner, in which it is ensured that the choke has virtually identical coils in a very good approximation to symmetrical, so that the losses in the current-compensated choke are also significantly reduced, specifically with the use of high-frequency operating current. While not wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that these advantages are obtained because when the holes are set in the non-conductive body, through which holes the one given winding is guided, through geometric constraints the course that the winding adopts upon placing tensile force on the wire segment, and thus the course of the coil around the ring core, is clearly predetermined. A symmetrical arrangement of the holes through which the windings of the one or the other coil are guided, with identical geometric conditions for the individual windings, is ensured by the ring core and the form of the non-conductive body. This automatically leads to symmetrical coils, as long as the given coil in both cases is guided through corresponding pairs of holes. In particular the crossover of windings can be caused only deliberately through the selection of corresponding hole combinations for the course of the windings crossing over one another and is otherwise excluded.
The use of a tensile force on both sides is very advantageous, since this ensures that all of the windings that are exposed to the tensile force are tightened to approximately the same extent. This is particularly relevant because an adequate tensile force has to be applied in order to impress the course predetermined by the geometric constraints onto the winding material of each of the windings. In the case of very inhomogeneous tension on the individual windings, a much higher load than the adequate tensile force occurs at some points of the ring body, which can lead to the fracture thereof at the points in question.
A method with particularly few steps is obtained when the tensile force is applied after the wire section has been guided through all of the holes belonging to one group or through all of the holes belonging to both groups. However, high tensile forces are necessary for this.
If the aim is to minimize the required tensile forces, which is the case in particular with the use of very thick wires as a material for the coils, it is advantageous if the tensile force is applied in each case when the wire section was guided through another hole.
The method according to the invention is explained by way of example based on
Subsequently, a second wire section is guided through the hole 15.5 in a direction opposite the line of sight of
Of course, a one-sided tensile force could also be applied, the tensile force could already be applied after one of the individual loops has been placed or after the loops have been placed for both wire sections the tensile force could be applied at the same time or consecutively to these wire sections.
The invention having been disclosed herein with reference to certain drawings and specific embodiments, it will be understood that these are exemplary of, and not limiting of, the appended claims.
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