The present invention relates to power factor control circuits for alternating current reactive loads and, more particularly, to a low cost power factor control circuit for AC induction motors.
Power factor control circuits are well known in the art and are used to improve efficiency of AC motor drives. In particular, AC induction motors generally operate at a speed which is related to the frequency of the applied excitation and independent, within limits, of the applied voltage and load. Accordingly, under light load conditions, the motor can run at constant speed but draw more current than is actually required to produce power to drive the light load. The motor is, therefore, inefficient at light load and power factor deteriorates. The practical solution to improve efficiency, i.e., power factor, is to adjust the voltage applied to the motor so that the applied voltage is a function of loading. Most AC motor power factor control circuits achieve this function by modulation of the voltage applied to the motor, i.e., by removing voltage from the motor for at least some portion of each half-cycle of the AC voltage waveform.
In general, circuits used with AC motors for power factor control employ some form of controllable electronic switching device, such as a triac, connected in series circuit between an AC power source and each phase winding of the motor. Monitoring circuit units (MCU) are then used to determine the zero crossings of the motor current and motor voltage, the difference between the zero crossings of voltage and current representing the phase shift, which is proportional to power factor. A microcontroller uses the phase shift measurement to adjust or control the triac conduction times so as to vary the duty cycle of the voltage applied to the motor in a manner to reduce the phase shift and thus improve motor efficiency.
A disadvantage of the prior art circuits for power factor control is the necessity of identifying the zero crossings of voltage and current. In many instances the current in the AC motor is characterized by noise and other oscillations which may create multiple zero crossings each time current reverses. Such current variations are reflected onto the voltage waveform and can provide similar difficulty in identifying a true zero crossing. As a consequence, circuits for determining current and voltage zero crossings may be more complex than desired and increase the cost of implementing power factor controls.
The present invention is illustrated in a method of power factor control for a power regulation system connected for supplying electric power to a reactive load. The system includes a microcomputer for supplying gating signals to an electronic switching device such as a triac for controlling the conduction phase angle of the triac to control the application of alternating current (AC) electric power to the load. The method comprises monitoring of the waveform of the AC voltage applied to the load and determining for each of the half-cycles of the waveform a timed event when the absolute value of the magnitude of the waveform transitions through a reference magnitude.
A mid-point between each pair of the timed events is designated as a peak of the voltage waveform. The process is repeated for the AC current waveform and the corresponding peaks of the current waveform identified. The time delay between a designated peak of the voltage waveform and a designated peak of a corresponding half-cycle of the current waveform is representative of the power factor of power supplied to the load and the applied voltage is adjusted in a manner to bring the power factor towards unity, i.e., by reducing the measured time delay. The system also monitors peak values of the AC current and limits the power factor adjustment to prevent peak current values from falling below a selected minimum value so as to prevent motor stall or overheat. Typically, the adjusting process removes voltage from the load for a portion of each half-cycle of the AC voltage waveform either by gating the triac out of conduction at beginning or end of a half-cycle or by pulse width modulation.
For a better understanding of the present invention, reference may be had to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The power control circuit of
In
A substantially identical circuit comprising the operational amplifier 88 and comparator 90 are used to monitor the current proportional voltage developed across the sensing resistor 28. The op amp 88 differs only in using a feedback resistor 88a which can be adjusted to set the gain of the amplifier 88. The signal produced by the amplifier 88 is compared in the comparator 90 with the same reference signal as was used with the comparator 72. The output of the comparator 90 is a logic signal which is coupled through the series resistors 92 and 94 to a base terminal of a switching transistor 96. The zener diode 98 protects the transistor 96 from transient voltages. The output of the transistor 96 is taken from its emitter terminal and coupled to an input terminal of the microprocessor 84. As indicated, each of the transistor switches 82 and 96 include emitter resistors 100 and 102, respectively, across which the output signals are developed.
The output signal developed by the op amp 88 is applied to a peak circuit comprising a diode 104 which supplies rectified half-wave pulses to an integrator comprising the combination of a resistor 106 and parallel capacitor 108. The peak circuit determines a positive peak value and a negative peak value of the current signal and supplies a signal representative of the current peak values to the microprocessor 84. It will also be noted that the processor 84 includes an external clock pulse generator or crystal oscillator 110 preferably operating at about 20 megahertz.
The processor 84 may be a conventional microprocessor such as a PlC 16C622 manufactured by Microchip Corporation. The processor senses the state change signals (logic signals) provided from the emitters of the transistors 82 and 96 and computes for each of the signals the time between successive signals. Using that information, the processor then determines the mid-point between the two signals which corresponds to a peak value of the voltage or current waveform and compares the midpoints to determine the time delay between the voltage and current waveforms.
Ideally a voltage waveform and current waveform are in phase. To better explain the operation of the microprocessor 84, reference is made to
The MCU, or processor, adjusts the timing of the triac operation on both the positive and negative half-cycles of the voltage waveform. In particular, once the processor has computed the time difference between the peaks of the voltage and current waveforms, the processor outputs gating signals through resistor 106 to the terminal G1 of connector 60 and from there to the gate of the triac 26 via the optical isolator 30. In one preferred embodiment, the time difference is computed by monitoring of the waveform of the AC voltage applied to the load and determining for each of the half-cycles of the waveform a pair of timed events when the absolute value of the magnitude of the waveform transitions through a reference magnitude. A mid-point between each pair of the timed events is designated as a peak of the voltage waveform. The process is repeated for the AC current waveform and the corresponding peaks of the current waveform identified. The time delay between a designated peak of the voltage waveform and a designated peak of a corresponding half-cycle of the current waveform is representative of the power factor of power supplied to the load and the applied voltage is adjusted in a manner to bring the power factor towards unity, i.e., by reducing the measured time delay.
In another preferred embodiment, the magnitudes of the waveforms are estimated. Though applying an integration equation to determine the maximum point of area under the curve is the most accurate method, estimating is a more reliable approach when a non-uniform waveform is created. In such a waveform, the zero crossing is typically not uniform. Additionally, the current waveform is also not uniform when the positive peaks and the negative peaks are not equally spaced. As disclosed, a power factor determinant is calculated by comparing the positive peak and the negative peak to estimate the center of maximum area under a curve, or waveform. The resulting information is used to determine when to chop the voltage to bring the voltage waveform as close as possible to in-phase with the current waveform.
In addition to being more cost effective, estimation may be used since the voltage and current waveforms may not cross the zero crossing, which only usually occurs in ideal situations. With estimation, a truer power factor value based on the area under the current and voltage curves may still be determined.
Once the positive peak or negative peak is determined, the timing of the gate signals is adjusted to chop or remove part of the voltage waveform or to gate the triac into conduction after the start of the voltage waveform so that the voltage applied to the load is adjusted in a manner to reduce the time difference between the positive peak, or negative peak, of the voltage waveform and the current waveform. Thus, as illustrated in
However, it will be appreciated that some limit must be placed on the voltage reduction in order to prevent the voltage from being reduced to too low a level in any attempt to phase align the voltage and current waveforms. This is done while adjusting the voltage applied to the load in a manner to bring the power factor towards unity. For this reason, the peak current detection circuit (capacitor 108) provides a peak current representative signal to the processor 84 which acts as a limit and prevents the processor from reducing the voltage applied to the load to a level below that which would maintain peak current above some pre-selected minimum value.
It will be noted that the processor can be programmed to respond to different values of load. For example, if the load comprises a fan and a compressor, the processor can be programmed to detect whether the fan is running by itself, the processor is running by itself, or the fan and compressor are running together by looking at the peak value of the current being drawn. Based upon the peak value of current, the triac can be controlled to regulate to a different value as a function of the particular load which is being powered by the system. In addition, the processor can provide signals indicating the status of the control circuit through use of the light emitting diodes D4, D5, D6 and D7. Each of these light emitting diodes are driven by the processor to indicate various functions such as, for example, whether the system is in a run or non-running mode, or whether gate signals are being applied to the triac. Generation of triac control or gating signals in synchronism with an AC voltage is a process well known in the art. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,592,062. Accordingly, the software routine implemented in processor 84 is readily developed by a programmer of ordinary skill in the art and detail disclosure of such a program is not necessary. The present invention provides a low cost implementation of a power factor correction circuit using a comparison circuit for obtaining the times of occurrence of a peak value of each of a voltage waveform and a current waveform and utilizes the difference in those times as a measurement of power factor. The act of controlling the applied voltage to adjust power factor is known although the implementation in the present invention presents several cost advantages.
In a preferred embodiment, the MCU will attempt to limit the switching depending on certain characteristics of the load. The characteristics it will attempt to recognize may be, but not limited to, device startup, normal run, and idle. By limiting switching and timing, the MCU in optimal fashion assists in reducing line noise generated by switching. Furthermore, the MCU will be programmed so as to err on the side of caution wherein it will attempt not to damage attached devices by limiting either too much voltage or the voltage over to long of a period. If the load does not meet a designated safety parameter, the MCU will set the triac to operate in a normal condition, not employing the present invention, until such time as the device determines a region in which it can safely switch the load.
While the invention has been described in what is presently considered to be a preferred embodiment, many variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the specific illustrative embodiment but be interpreted within the full spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4851635 | Farrow | Jul 1989 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050184708 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |