The present invention relates to a method and a device for switching a low-voltage contactor for operating a three-phase load, wherein the contactor includes an actuating unit having a coil, main contacts operated by the coil and an electronic circuit for controlling voltage supplied to the coil. In particular, the invention relates to initiating switching commands when controlling the coil. Low voltage is commonly defined in a range of up to 1000V AC.
A contactor is an electrically controlled switch device used for switching an electric power or control circuit of an electrical load connected to an electric circuit. The electrical load may be a three-phase load. To connect such an electrical load, the contactor comprises a contacting unit including three main contacts configured to connect or disconnect the load to a main electric network and an actuating unit including a coil for actuating the main contacts. For controlling voltage supplied to the coil, the contactor further includes an electronic control circuit. Typically, control voltage of the electronic control circuit is supplied by an electric circuit drawn from, for example, one or two of the three phases.
Due to synchronization effect between the main electric network and the control voltage, each of the main contacts connected to one of the three phases may switch (open or close) at almost the same phase angle in all switching operations. The electrical load or burden on each of the contacts will therefore differ substantially, which results in substantially different arc energies. Consequently, the most electrically affected is subject to higher erosion than the others. Therefore, the thickness of the contact material of the affected contacts may decrease faster. This leads to different/uneven erosion levels of different contacts. This means that the service time of the contactor is limited by the contact that fails first.
A patent U.S. Pat. No. 6,671,157 B1 discloses a method for controlling a drive coil of a contactor having contacts for a load current. The method includes providing an electronic drive control apparatus including a microcontroller. A randomly selected constantly varying time delay is applied in the microcontroller after a time at which a supply voltage has built up at the electronic drive control apparatus and before the a time at which the supply voltage is measured.
Another patent U.S. Pat. No. 6,927,959 B2 discloses a method for switching contacts of a switch device for ensuing optimum service life, wherein an optimum switching point, in terms of the load of one of the switching contacts, is determined depending on a current path that is measured during the switching process and the switching point is shifted by a delay time from switching operation to switching operation. The optimal switching point is preferably determined by self-calibration of the switching device. To be able to determine the optimized switching time, the current in at least one of the three phases is measured,
The object of the present invention is to provide an improved method of switching contacts of a contactor to ensure uniform wear of different contacts and therefore to enable a contactor carried the method thereby have a longer service time.
This object is achieved by the method as defined claim 1. The method comprises steps of
Due to the fact that the invention initiates instant opening commands based on a pre-arranged time point selection scheme that includes a plurality of time points distributed in a period of the control voltage of the electronic control circuit, the invention is able to distribute instant opening commands to each of the main contacts. Consequently, erosions and heats generated by arcs are distributed evenly on each of the contacts in a determined way, which increases the service life of the contactor.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the method further comprises steps of dividing the time points in the pre-arranged time point selection scheme into a plurality of groups. Each of the groups includes at least three time points with a pre-defined interval so that the corresponding opening commands are distributed on each of the three phases. One advantage is that with the pre-arranged scheme, burdens on the contacts are shifted from one phase to the other and eventually distributed the burdens on each of the contacts, which even facilities the rated making, breaking capacity tests and operational performance tests. This is because that typically such tests result in the extensive heat dissipation at the main contacts. By distributing the opening commands on each of the main contacts, the thermal burden is distributed on each of main contacts. Thus, the risk of overheating a single main contact is significantly decreased.
Preferably, the pre-defined interval is calculated based on a phase angle of either 60° in a half period or 120° in one period of the control voltage. In a three-phase electrical system the phases have an offset of 120° between each other, by shifting the interval 60° in a half period or 120° in one period of the control voltage, the time points of the time point selection scheme are ensured to be distributed in the period of the control voltage, which consequently ensures that instant opening commands will be evenly distributed on each of the contacts.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the method further comprises steps of selecting a time point from a group sequentially, selecting a time point from the successive group in the case that all of the time points from the preceding group have been selected, and performing repeatedly the above two steps. By providing a time point selection scheme, the invention makes it possible to systematically select time points and based thereon instant opening commands are initiated to be well distributed on each of the main contacts. Therefore, it prevents that a sequence of opening operations are initiated on the same main contact and ensures distributed erosions on each of the main contacts.
According to yet another embodiment of the invention, the method further comprises a step of shifting time points in a preceding group with a pre-defined offset to construct time points in a successive group so that each of the main contacts is open at different phase angles. Preferably, the pre-defined offset is calculated based on a phase angle in a range of 5°-15°.
The present method will be carried out by a low-voltage contactor as defined in claim 7. The low voltage contactor is used for connecting and disconnecting a three-phase load to an electric main network. The contactor includes a coil, main contacts operated by the coil and an electronic control circuit for controlling a voltage supplied to the coil, characterized in that the electronic circuit include a pre-arranged time point selection scheme and is further adapted to select a time point from the pre-arranged time point selection scheme as a time and initiate an instant opening command based on the selected time point.
It is advantageous to initiate an instant opening command based a pro-arranged scheme, which does not need measurement values compared with the prior arts. Therefore, an inexpensive contactor can be achieved.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the time point selection scheme has a plurality of time points distributed in a period of the control voltage of the electronic control circuit. Furthermore, the time points in the pre-arranged scheme are divided into groups, each of the groups including at least three time points distributed in the period with a pre-defined interval and time points in a successive group constructed by shifting time points in a preceding group with a pre-defined offset.
Preferably, the time point selection scheme is stored in memory storage in any form of non-volatile memory, such as ROM, EPROM and EEPROM etc. Therefore, the scheme is kept alive even when the electronic circuit is switched off.
The invention will now be explained more closely by the description of different embodiments of the invention and with reference to the appended figures.
a shows a schematic diagram of a low-voltage contactor, according to one embodiment of the invention, wherein the control voltage of the contactor is drawn from one of the three phases.
b shows a schematic diagram of a low-voltage contactor, according to another embodiment of the invention, wherein the control voltage of the contactor is drawn from two of the three phases via a transformer.
a shows a low-voltage contactor 1, according to one embodiment of the invention. The low-voltage contactor 1 is used for connecting or disconnecting an electric load 2, in this example, a motor, to a main electric network having three phases L1, L2, L3.
The contactor 1 includes three main contacts 12 connected to each of the three phases L1, L2, L3 of the main electric network, an actuating unit including a coil 10 and a fixed magnet core 16 and a movable core 14, an electronic control circuit 20 for controlling voltage/power supplied to the coil 10. Each of the main contacts comprises a fixed contact and a movable contact connected to the movable core 14. The coil 10, the fixed magnet core 16 and the movable core 14 are arranged for actuating the main contacts 12 and therefore make connection and disconnection operations.
In this example, the control voltage of the electronic control circuit is supplied by an electric circuit including connections to the neutral and the phase L1. However, it should be understood that control voltage of the electronic control circuit can be provided differently, for example from two of the three phases or from a transformer 30 that is connected in the main network as shown in
The electronic control circuit 20 further comprises a pre-defined time point selection scheme 22. The electronic control circuit 20 is, among other tasks, further adapted to initiate an instant opening command based on the pre-defined time point selection scheme 22.
The time point selection scheme 22 may be kept in a memory-storage in any form of non-volatile memory, for example, ROM, EPROM and, EEPROM etc. Therefore, the scheme will be kept alive even when the electronic circuit is switched off.
With reference to
The time points are further divided into a plurality groups. Each of the groups contains at least three time points that are distributed in the period with a pre-determined interval calculated based on a phase angle, step 120. Furthermore, the time points in a successive group may be optionally constructed by shifting corresponding time points in the preceding group with a pre-defined offset calculated based on a phase angle, step 130.
For example, after steps 120 and 130, a time point selection scheme for a half of control voltage may include following time points corresponding to the following sequence {(0°, 60°, 120°), (10°, 70°, 130°), (20°, 80°, 140°), (30°, 90°, 150°), (40°, 100°, 160°), (50°, 110°, 170°)}. Thus, the scheme includes six groups. The pre-determined interval in this sequence in each group is 60°, while the pre-defined offset for the corresponding time points of two successive groups is 10°. Preferably, the pre-defined offset is calculated based on a phase angle in a range of 5° -15° in order to have a complete coverage of the main contacts so that opening commands are initiated and distributed on each of the main contacts. For example, an offset calculated based on a phase angle 30° will result in only two different groups, which does not enable well-distributed opening commands on each of the contacts.
Therefore, each of the groups includes time points such that the corresponding opening commands are distributed on each of the three phases, which results in an evenly distributed burden on each of the contacts. Furthermore, the offsets between the corresponding time points of the groups ensures that contacts connected to a phase will not be always open at the same phase angle. By providing time points at different phase angles, it ensures that none of the main contacts will have most of the burden the whole time; otherwise, one or two of the contacts will be most burdened. Consequently, even burden of the contacts is enabled. This means that the erosion on the mostly burdened contact is decreased while the erosion on the less burdened contacts may be increased. However, overall it is advantageous because it is the most eroded contact that limits the service time of a contactor.
In a similar way, a time point selection scheme may also be constructed for a complete period of control voltage by having an interval 120°, for example.
As shown in
Analogously, an interval of 60° will provide an equivalent effect in a half period. Although, it may be preferably to choose 60° and 120° for a half period or an complete period, it should be understood that the principle of distributing time points over a period may be applied by selecting another interval. This principle may be even applied when selecting an offset for shifting time points in the groups. For example, an offset of 10° may result in the same effect as offset 190° for a complete period. Therefore, either of them may be selected to be an offset. Furthermore, groups may be ordered differently. For example, the following sequence is also applicable {(0°, 60°, 120°), (30°, 90°, 150°), (10°, 70°, 130°), (40°, 100°, 160°), (20°, 80°, 140°), (50°, 110°, 170°)} to construct time points in a time point selection scheme, although, comparing to the previous one, the groups are in a different order.
With reference to
The selected time point is further applied as a time delay to initiate an instant opening command, steps 150 and 160. In this way, opening commands are initiated evenly to each of the contacts and each of the contacts is open in different phase angle in a period of control voltage. Thus, the consequence of the unwanted synchronization effect is prevented.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/060123 | 5/30/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/20/2014 |