This application claims the benefit and priority of Indian Patent Application No. 1204/MUM/2013 filed Mar. 28, 2013. The entire disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
This disclosure relates to damage limitation. In particular, but without limitation, this disclosure relates to limiting the damage caused by rectifier circuits that are supplied by a soft-start resistance and which are either faulty or are being operated in a manner other that for which they were designed.
Electrical power can be provided for use in the form of a Direct Current (DC) voltage and also in the form of an Alternating Current (AC) voltage that has been rectified by applying an AC voltage waveform to a half- or full-wave rectifier so as to produce a rectified voltage. One type of rectifier employs a plurality of capacitances and diodes in combination to double, or otherwise multiply, an input AC voltage that is being rectified. Rectifiers may be employed in conjunction with soft-start circuits having a resistive element and a switch, wherein a soft-start circuit is arranged, when a voltage is initially provided to the rectifier, to cause current supplied by a power source to the rectifier to flow via the resistive element thereby limiting peak current during circuit initialisation. Once one or more predefined criteria are complied with, the switch is operated to short-circuit the resistive element and remove the resistive element's limiting influence on the current.
Aspects and features of the present disclosure are set out in the appended claims.
In an example approach for use with a device having a rectifier circuit and a resistive soft-start circuit coupled to an input of the rectifier circuit, a voltage output by the rectifier circuit is monitored and an assessment is made as to whether or not the monitored voltage is indicative of a fault. In the event that the assessment determines that the monitored voltage is indicative of a fault, a switch operable to allow current passing between the source and the rectifier circuit to bypass the resistive element is controlled so as to more it from an open position to a closed position or vice versa.
If the assessment determines that the monitored voltage is below an undervoltage threshold for a predetermined period or longer and/or that the rate of change of the monitored voltage is below a predetermined rate of voltage change, then the switch is closed to bypass a resistive element of the soft-start circuit. This increases the current that is drawn by the faulty circuit thereby potentially allowing damage to occur; however, by increasing the current that is drawn, an upstream overcurrent protection device that would not otherwise have been activated may then act to break the circuit that feeds the rectifier.
If the assessment determines that the monitored voltage is above an overvoltage threshold, and optionally further determines that the monitored voltage is below a damage level threshold, then the switch is closed.
If the assessment determines that the monitored voltage is above a damage level threshold, then the switch is closed. This increases the current that is drawn by the faulty circuit thereby potentially allowing damage to occur; however, by increasing the current that is drawn, an upstream overcurrent protection device that would not otherwise have been activated may then act to break the circuit that feeds the rectifier.
Although the approaches described herein may not prevent damage occurring to the rectifier circuit and/or the soft-start circuit, damage is advantageously limited to rectifier and soft-start circuits and other components that are in the immediate vicinity thereof and the chances of catastrophic damage, such as fire or explosion, occurring are reduced.
Examples of the present disclosure will now be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
If one or more of the capacitances 128, 130 of the circuit of
Also, in the event that a supply voltage substantially higher than that for which the rectifier 110 was designed to operate is provided between the supply line 112 and the supply neutral 114 whilst the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 is open, then the current passing through the soft-start resistance 120 may be sufficient to cause the soft-start resistance 120 to overheat and/or to ignite and furthermore, the excess voltage provided across the capacitances 128, 130 may be sufficient to cause them to start to boil off or vent their electrolytes and they may overheat. Further, if an electrolytic capacitance has boiled off or vented some of its electrolyte then the value of that capacitance in Farads will fall and the amount of energy dissipated in the capacitance with each AC cycle will increase—thereby starting a vicious circle which may cause the capacitance to ignite and/or explode.
Although the concept of resistive soft-start systems is that they are designed to control the operation of a circuit upon initialisation, if fault conditions are detected for the circuit, then the soft-start system may be used to either limit the fault or alternatively exacerbate the fault so as to force third party protection devices to trip out thereby bringing about an end to the fault before any catastrophic damage occurs.
In normal operation, one would expect that, upon connection of the circuit 90 to the electricity transmission system 230, the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 would be open and the voltage detected by the voltage measurer 138 would rise from zero at at least a predetermined rate of voltage change until it exceeded a normal operational undervoltage threshold and subsequently plateaued or stabilised—as illustrated by conditions 1 and 2 of
As one possibility, in case a fault with one or more of the capacitances occurs after the switch 123 has been closed due to the criteria for condition 3 having been satisfied, the microprocessor 140 will continue to monitor the voltage measured by the voltage measurer 138 and, if that voltage is below the predetermined undervoltage threshold and one or more predetermined conditions apply—for example, the voltage being below the predetermined undervoltage threshold for more than a predetermined time period and plateauing and/or the voltage having a rate of change below a certain threshold—continue to keep the switch 123 closed. By using the predetermined conditions, a normal power down operation can be distinguished from a fault condition.
In circumstances where the voltage detected by the voltage measurer 138 has previously stabilised above the undervoltage threshold for normal operation and the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 has been closed (condition 3 of
In circumstances where the voltage detected by the voltage measurer 138 rises beyond the undervoltage threshold for normal operation but, unlike condition 3 does not plateau or stabilise, and instead continues to increase, then the plateauing or stabilising criteria of condition 3 that causes closure of the switch 123 may not be met and so the voltage detected by the voltage measurer 138 may rise from below the undervoltage threshold for normal operation to above the overvoltage threshold for normal operation without the switch 123 being closed (condition 6 of
As one possibility, the microprocessor 140 is arranged to determine that the voltage measured by the voltage measurer 138 is above a predetermined overvoltage threshold for normal operation but below a predetermined damage level threshold and to control the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 and open it upon making such a determination.
The above approaches of opening the switch 123 when the detected voltage is above overvoltage threshold for normal operation (described above with reference to condition 4) and of closing the switch 123 when the detected voltage is above damage level threshold (described above with reference to condition 7) are, in addition to being applicable for voltage doubler configuration rectifiers, also particularly applicable for other types of rectifiers, such as bridge rectifiers.
Although the above has been described with reference to the switch of the short circuiting leg comprising a relay, a person skilled in the art will appreciate that alternative or additional means of interrupting the short circuiting leg could equally be employed, for example, a semiconductor switch.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that, although a number of different approaches to performing damage limitation have been described herein—in particular the approaches described with reference to: closing the switch when the measured voltage remains below an undervoltage threshold for too long; opening the switch when the measured voltage exceeds an overvoltage threshold; and closing the switch when the measured voltage exceeds a damage level threshold, any or all of the described approaches may be combined.
A person skilled in the art will recognise a number of different devices that may be employed to provide the overcurrent protection functionality of the overcurrent protection device described herein. For example, they will understand that the overcurrent protection may be embodied by a fuse, a circuit-breaker, a semiconductor switch and/or any other current based switch and they will further understand that reference herein to the overcurrent protection device tripping or tripping out refer to the act of breaking a circuit and may be performed both by passive devices, such as fuses, as well as active devices.
Although the above has described approaches that may be implemented by way of a microprocessor, the approaches described herein could equally be implemented without the use of a microprocessor. For example, the approaches described herein could be implemented by way of circuitry, which may be integrated circuitry such as one or more Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs), arranged to have the functionality described herein.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that threshold hysteresis may be employed in order to avoid rapidly switching the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 in circumstances where the voltage measured by the voltage measurer 138 hovers around either the undervoltage threshold for normal operation or the overvoltage threshold for normal operation.
A person skilled in the art will understand that the overcurrent protection device which some of the approaches described herein aim to cause to trip out once a fault condition is detected, may be owned and/or operated by a third party and so the present disclosure need not be limited to include the overcurrent protection device.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that, whilst the above has been described with reference to a circuit that drives a load that is an inverter, the present disclosure may be equally applied to circuits having other loads, such as a drive. Also, as inverters and loads may already have inherent voltage measuring capabilities, the voltage measurer and/or the microprocessor may be integral to the inverter/load. Advantageously, for such systems, the methods described herein may be implementable without the need for any additional hardware. Furthermore, in such cases, the inverter/load may be arranged to control whether, and if so to what extent, it draws current from the rectifier and may be further arranged to only draw current when the switch 123 of the short circuiting leg 122 is closed.
The methods described herein may be controlled and/or carried out by a computer and may be embodied in a computer readable medium carrying machine readable instructions arranged, upon execution by a processor of the computer, to cause the processor to carry out any of the methods described herein.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that although the above is set out in terms of a capacitive voltage doubling rectifier, other kinds of rectifier may equally be employed, for example a bridge rectifier etc., and other types of capacitive voltage multiplying rectifier may equally be employed, for example a voltage quadrupler, etc.
A person skilled in the art will understand that, where mention is made above of capacitances, those capacitances may be manifested in the form of one or more capacitors, for example a bank of capacitors, and that those capacitors may be electrolytic capacitors.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that whilst the above has described the resistive soft-start system 118 as being positioned between the supply neutral 114 and the rectifier 110, it could alternatively or additionally be connected between the supply line 112 and the rectifier 110.
There is described herein a damage limitation approach comprising determining that a voltage produced by a rectifier circuit is indicative of a fault and consequently controlling a switch operable to bypass a resistive element of a circuit via which the rectifier circuit is supplied.
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that the terms “undervoltage time period”, “overvoltage time period”, and “damage level time period” are labels for time periods that have been predetermined as appropriate to use as indications respectively that: a detected voltage below the undervoltage threshold for normal operation is indicative of a fault; a detected voltage above the overvoltage threshold for normal operation is indicative of a fault; and a detected voltage above the damage level threshold is indicative of a fault. The skilled person will further understand that the terms “undervoltage threshold for normal operation”, “overvoltage threshold for normal operation”, and “damage level threshold” are labels for voltage thresholds that have been predetermined as appropriate to use as indications that a detected voltage is indicative of a fault.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1204/MUM/2013 | Mar 2013 | IN | national |