The present application is directed to short circuit control for high current pulse power supplies.
In applications using batteries or other stored power devices as a primary power supply, short circuit detection is typically included to determine if there is a short circuit fault in the power supply. Short circuit detection circuits can also isolate the power supply from a load when a short circuit is detected, thereby preventing the load from seeing excessive fault currents, which can interfere with load operations. Additionally, a backup power supply is often included to continue providing power to the load when the primary power supply is isolated from the load due to a short circuit fault. Systems using backup power supplies also include detection circuits for detecting a short circuit in the connected backup power supplies. The inclusion of additional detection circuits adds weight and cost to the construction of these systems.
One standard short circuit detection method uses a current sensor combined with a controller to detect when the output current of the power supply exceeds a current threshold. When the output current exceeds the current threshold, the controller determines that a short circuit is present and isolates the power supply. The threshold is set at an expected short circuit current that is higher than the current used for standard operations.
Disclosed is a method for controlling a high current pulse power supply. The method for detecting a load current uses a current sensor; and isolates a power source from a load when the load current exceeds a current magnitude threshold for a duration that is greater than an excess current duration threshold.
Also disclosed is a power supply circuit having a controller electrically coupled to a switch driver. The power supply circuit also has a plurality of power channels, with each of the power channels connecting one of multiple power sources to a load power input and each of the power channels is electrically coupled to the switch driver. The power supply circuit also has a current sensor connected to the load power input and to the controller. The current sensor is capable of detecting a load input current and communicating the load input current to the controller.
These and other features of the present disclosure can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
Some electrical systems operate using high magnitude current pulses. In such systems, the expected short circuit current can be lower than the magnitude of the high magnitude current pulses. Known short circuit detection circuits can result in false short circuit detections when a desired current has a pulse magnitude that exceeds an expected short circuit current.
In standard operation each power supply 110, 120 is connected to the load 140 via a power channel 116, 126. The switching device 130 within each power channel 116, 126 is configured such that it is capable of interrupting the output power line 112, 122. Each of the power supplies 110, 120 is connected to the load power input 142 by its corresponding power channel 116, 126, thereby allowing the controller 160 to isolate any power supply 110, 120 which has a short circuit fault.
When the load 140 requires a periodic high current load spike for normal operations, standard short circuit detection techniques will falsely trip on each current spike, and are therefore inadequate. Instead, the controller 160, illustrated in
The current sensor 170 detects the magnitude of the current at the load power input 142 and determines if the current exceeds a current magnitude threshold. The current magnitude threshold is set at an expected short circuit output current, and is tripped whenever the expected short circuit output current is exceeded. When the current magnitude threshold is exceeded, the controller 160 determines how long the current threshold has been exceeded, and compares the duration that the current magnitude threshold has been exceeded to an excess current duration threshold. The controller 160 determines that a short circuit fault is present when both the current magnitude threshold and the duration threshold are exceeded. In this way, the controller 160 can distinguish between desirable high current load spikes that exceed the expected short circuit current of the power supply 110, 120 and a continuous fault current resulting from a short circuit within the power supply 110, 120 or the load 140.
By locating the current sensor 170 at the load input, the controller 160 detects the ongoing load current regardless of which power supply 110, 120 is currently providing power to the load 140. This configuration allows for a single current sensor 170 to be used to control all of the power supplies 110, 120 in any system in which a single power supply is used to power the load 140 at a given time. Alternately, a current sensor 170 can be located at each of the power supply outputs 112, 122, with the controller 160 having a dedicated controller input for each current sensor 170.
In the example of
The switching mechanisms 130 illustrated in
If the current magnitude threshold is exceeded, the controller 160 starts a duration counter in a “start duration counter” step 240. The duration counter can be a software counter that determines how long the input load current has exceeded the current magnitude threshold. The controller 160 checks to see if the duration has exceeded an excess current duration threshold in a “does duration exceed threshold” step 250. If the excess current duration threshold is not exceeded, the controller 160 determines if the current threshold is still exceeded in an “is current magnitude threshold no longer exceeded” step 260. If the current magnitude threshold is no longer exceeded, the controller 160 restarts the method at the “provide power to load” step 210. A condition where the current magnitude threshold was temporarily exceeded, but the excess current duration threshold was not exceeded, indicates that there was a desirable high current pulse, and not a short circuit fault.
If the current magnitude threshold is still exceeded, the controller 160 continues to determine the duration of the excess current and returns to the “does duration exceed excess current duration threshold” step 250. If the “does duration exceed excess current duration threshold” step 250 determines that the duration of the excess current has exceeded the excess current duration threshold, the controller 160 determines that a short circuit fault is present in the power supply 110 in a “determine presence of a short circuit fault” step 270.
Once a short circuit fault has been detected, the controller 160 isolates the primary power supply 110 and connects the backup power supply 120 to the input load power 142 using the procedure described above with regards to
It is understood that one of skill in the art can reconfigure the above described method to accommodate a single load having multiple power supplies beyond a primary power supply and a backup power supply.
Although an example has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this disclosure. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this disclosure.