MQHR-28-28S
... stage, but due to the push-pull nature of this stage it creates a ripple at double its switching frequency. As a result, both the input and the output of the converter have a fundamental ripple frequency of about 550 kHz in the freerunning mode. Rectification of the isolation stage’s output is accom ...
... stage, but due to the push-pull nature of this stage it creates a ripple at double its switching frequency. As a result, both the input and the output of the converter have a fundamental ripple frequency of about 550 kHz in the freerunning mode. Rectification of the isolation stage’s output is accom ...
Document
... The maximum value of reverse voltage, sometimes designated as PIV, occurs at the peak of each negative alternation of the input cycle when the diode is reverse-biased ...
... The maximum value of reverse voltage, sometimes designated as PIV, occurs at the peak of each negative alternation of the input cycle when the diode is reverse-biased ...
Micronote 130
... to 1665 W at 6.4/83 μs (500 W at 10/1000 μs) when VC 31.0 V or VC 269 V. As a result, the TVS device will also meet the requirements of the DO-160D specification for Pin Injection tests of Waveform 4 at Level 3 conditions at 25ºC when the VC is in these lower or higher specified ranges. If the 5 ...
... to 1665 W at 6.4/83 μs (500 W at 10/1000 μs) when VC 31.0 V or VC 269 V. As a result, the TVS device will also meet the requirements of the DO-160D specification for Pin Injection tests of Waveform 4 at Level 3 conditions at 25ºC when the VC is in these lower or higher specified ranges. If the 5 ...
and Dual-Channel Antenna LDO With Current
... Output of current sense for sensing. To set the SENSE output voltage level, connect a resistor between this pin and GND. In addition, connect a 1-µF capacitor from this pin to GND for frequency compensation of the current-sense loop. Short this pin to GND if not used. Output of current sense for sen ...
... Output of current sense for sensing. To set the SENSE output voltage level, connect a resistor between this pin and GND. In addition, connect a 1-µF capacitor from this pin to GND for frequency compensation of the current-sense loop. Short this pin to GND if not used. Output of current sense for sen ...
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... • The ULN2004 array provides buffers for each line to handle current demand • Each channel is essenJally a pair of transistors in a Darlington configuraJon – when input goes high, the output will be ...
... • The ULN2004 array provides buffers for each line to handle current demand • Each channel is essenJally a pair of transistors in a Darlington configuraJon – when input goes high, the output will be ...
MAX7060 280MHz to 450MHz Programmable ASK/FSK Transmitter EVALUATION KIT AVAILABLE
... coded for FSK can be maintained while still satisfying regulatory emission-bandwidth standards. The full set of configuration functions are handled by an on-chip serial peripheral interface (SPI). There is also a manual mode where a limited number of settings can be made directly through selected pi ...
... coded for FSK can be maintained while still satisfying regulatory emission-bandwidth standards. The full set of configuration functions are handled by an on-chip serial peripheral interface (SPI). There is also a manual mode where a limited number of settings can be made directly through selected pi ...
Owners Guide
... family of advanced high-performance power inverters from Xantrex, the leader in high-frequency inverter design. The XPower 450 efficiently powers a wide variety of AC loads, such as compact TVs and VCRs, laptops, camcorder and cell phone chargers, compact fluorescent lights, and soldering irons. Dep ...
... family of advanced high-performance power inverters from Xantrex, the leader in high-frequency inverter design. The XPower 450 efficiently powers a wide variety of AC loads, such as compact TVs and VCRs, laptops, camcorder and cell phone chargers, compact fluorescent lights, and soldering irons. Dep ...
Application Note 9017 Manufacturing Technology of a Small Capacity Inverter CONTENTS
... protect the IGBT. Section 4 introduces the boot strap used in the inverter gate drive. It also describes the method for deciding on the rating of each component. These values can be used in other application circuits. Lastly, Section 5 describes the design of an actual 3[kVA] class inverter based on ...
... protect the IGBT. Section 4 introduces the boot strap used in the inverter gate drive. It also describes the method for deciding on the rating of each component. These values can be used in other application circuits. Lastly, Section 5 describes the design of an actual 3[kVA] class inverter based on ...
Troubleshooting Induction Motors
... 65% reduced voltage start (RVS). It is normally specified that the motor be suitable for starting at 65 or 50% of rated voltage. This is almost always incorrect. The typical reason for RVS is due to a weak power system requiring the current to be low on startup to minimize line voltage drop. To mini ...
... 65% reduced voltage start (RVS). It is normally specified that the motor be suitable for starting at 65 or 50% of rated voltage. This is almost always incorrect. The typical reason for RVS is due to a weak power system requiring the current to be low on startup to minimize line voltage drop. To mini ...
Helios Rectifier 25/48 Single Phase
... power shelf into which up to three rectifiers can be installed. The rectifier is forced air cooled with air entering from the front and exhausting out the rear of the power shelf. Separate or common AC power feeds are connected to the power shelf to provide power to each rectifier through the back p ...
... power shelf into which up to three rectifiers can be installed. The rectifier is forced air cooled with air entering from the front and exhausting out the rear of the power shelf. Separate or common AC power feeds are connected to the power shelf to provide power to each rectifier through the back p ...
High Power Flyback Controller with Primary
... Open Frame SMPS for Industrial, Printer, White Goods, LCD Monitors Energy Efficient AC-DC Supplies for Nominal Power 10-W to 65-W, (with up to 200% transient peak power) ...
... Open Frame SMPS for Industrial, Printer, White Goods, LCD Monitors Energy Efficient AC-DC Supplies for Nominal Power 10-W to 65-W, (with up to 200% transient peak power) ...
High Power Flyback Controller with Primary
... Open Frame SMPS for Industrial, Printer, White Goods, LCD Monitors Energy Efficient AC-DC Supplies for Nominal Power 10-W to 65-W, (with up to 200% transient peak power) ...
... Open Frame SMPS for Industrial, Printer, White Goods, LCD Monitors Energy Efficient AC-DC Supplies for Nominal Power 10-W to 65-W, (with up to 200% transient peak power) ...
S0410C
... The Series RSS and RSSP Strobe shall be of low current design. Where Wall mount, Multi-Candela, Strobe Appliances are specified the strobe intensity shall have four (4) field selectable settings and shall be rated per ULC-S526-02 for: 15, 30, 75 and 110 candela. The selector switch for selecting the ...
... The Series RSS and RSSP Strobe shall be of low current design. Where Wall mount, Multi-Candela, Strobe Appliances are specified the strobe intensity shall have four (4) field selectable settings and shall be rated per ULC-S526-02 for: 15, 30, 75 and 110 candela. The selector switch for selecting the ...
Curve Tracers - MATsolutions
... non-volatile memory and recalled at the touch of a button. A live curve can then be compared with a previously stored curve to assess temperature drift or other changes in operating parameters. To help identify ...
... non-volatile memory and recalled at the touch of a button. A live curve can then be compared with a previously stored curve to assess temperature drift or other changes in operating parameters. To help identify ...
A Progressive Way to Integrate Current Measurement into Modern Abstract
... separation. However, any equipment that connects the shunt to a microcontroller needs to be designed in a way that it separates control and power electronics. One common way to do so is to have the voltage across the shunt digitized using an A/D-converter that has its supply voltage referenced to th ...
... separation. However, any equipment that connects the shunt to a microcontroller needs to be designed in a way that it separates control and power electronics. One common way to do so is to have the voltage across the shunt digitized using an A/D-converter that has its supply voltage referenced to th ...
... the converter is operating as a rectifier, there are some current phase conditions that render the NP current contribution of the short vectors insufficient to compensate the imbalance generated by the medium vectors. Thus, the NP voltage exhibits an offset, which can be positive or negative. Howeve ...
P82623
... 5. The AMT-12/24 model is supplied with four snap-in covers to hide the mounting holes and provide an attractive installation. The snap-in covers are interchangeable and have slots on each end so they can be removed if necessary (by prying them up with a thin blade screwdriver). To insert snap-in co ...
... 5. The AMT-12/24 model is supplied with four snap-in covers to hide the mounting holes and provide an attractive installation. The snap-in covers are interchangeable and have slots on each end so they can be removed if necessary (by prying them up with a thin blade screwdriver). To insert snap-in co ...
Aalborg Universitet Modulation Scheme for Harmonic Reduction
... Speed Drive (ASD) systems are commonly employed with diode rectifiers or Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCR) as the front-ends (i.e., ac-dc converters). Apart from low cost, small volume, and high reliability, harmonic currents are significantly produced at the grid side by the rectification apparat ...
... Speed Drive (ASD) systems are commonly employed with diode rectifiers or Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCR) as the front-ends (i.e., ac-dc converters). Apart from low cost, small volume, and high reliability, harmonic currents are significantly produced at the grid side by the rectification apparat ...
Power engineering
Power engineering, also called power systems engineering, is a subfield of energy engineering that deals with the generation, transmission, distribution and utilization of electric power and the electrical devices connected to such systems including generators, motors and transformers. Although much of the field is concerned with the problems of three-phase AC power – the standard for large-scale power transmission and distribution across the modern world – a significant fraction of the field is concerned with the conversion between AC and DC power and the development of specialized power systems such as those used in aircraft or for electric railway networks. It was a subfield of electrical engineering before the emergence of energy engineering.Electricity became a subject of scientific interest in the late 17th century with the work of William Gilbert. Over the next two centuries a number of important discoveries were made including the incandescent light bulb and the voltaic pile. Probably the greatest discovery with respect to power engineering came from Michael Faraday who in 1831 discovered that a change in magnetic flux induces an electromotive force in a loop of wire—a principle known as electromagnetic induction that helps explain how generators and transformers work.In 1881 two electricians built the world's first power station at Godalming in England. The station employed two waterwheels to produce an alternating current that was used to supply seven Siemens arc lamps at 250 volts and thirty-four incandescent lamps at 40 volts. However supply was intermittent and in 1882 Thomas Edison and his company, The Edison Electric Light Company, developed the first steam-powered electric power station on Pearl Street in New York City. The Pearl Street Station consisted of several generators and initially powered around 3,000 lamps for 59 customers. The power station used direct current and operated at a single voltage. Since the direct current power could not be easily transformed to the higher voltages necessary to minimise power loss during transmission, the possible distance between the generators and load was limited to around half-a-mile (800 m).That same year in London Lucien Gaulard and John Dixon Gibbs demonstrated the first transformer suitable for use in a real power system. The practical value of Gaulard and Gibbs' transformer was demonstrated in 1884 at Turin where the transformer was used to light up forty kilometres (25 miles) of railway from a single alternating current generator. Despite the success of the system, the pair made some fundamental mistakes. Perhaps the most serious was connecting the primaries of the transformers in series so that switching one lamp on or off would affect other lamps further down the line. Following the demonstration George Westinghouse, an American entrepreneur, imported a number of the transformers along with a Siemens generator and set his engineers to experimenting with them in the hopes of improving them for use in a commercial power system.One of Westinghouse's engineers, William Stanley, recognised the problem with connecting transformers in series as opposed to parallel and also realised that making the iron core of a transformer a fully enclosed loop would improve the voltage regulation of the secondary winding. Using this knowledge he built a much improved alternating current power system at Great Barrington, Massachusetts in 1886. In 1885 the Italian physicist and electrical engineer Galileo Ferraris demonstrated an induction motor and in 1887 and 1888 the Serbian-American engineer Nikola Tesla filed a range of patents related to power systems including one for a practical two-phase induction motor which Westinghouse licensed for his AC system.By 1890 the power industry had flourished and power companies had built thousands of power systems (both direct and alternating current) in the United States and Europe – these networks were effectively dedicated to providing electric lighting. During this time a fierce rivalry in the US known as the ""War of Currents"" emerged between Edison and Westinghouse over which form of transmission (direct or alternating current) was superior. In 1891, Westinghouse installed the first major power system that was designed to drive an electric motor and not just provide electric lighting. The installation powered a 100 horsepower (75 kW) synchronous motor at Telluride, Colorado with the motor being started by a Tesla induction motor. On the other side of the Atlantic, Oskar von Miller built a 20 kV 176 km three-phase transmission line from Lauffen am Neckar to Frankfurt am Main for the Electrical Engineering Exhibition in Frankfurt. In 1895, after a protracted decision-making process, the Adams No. 1 generating station at Niagara Falls began transmitting three-phase alternating current power to Buffalo at 11 kV. Following completion of the Niagara Falls project, new power systems increasingly chose alternating current as opposed to direct current for electrical transmission.Although the 1880s and 1890s were seminal decades in the field, developments in power engineering continued throughout the 20th and 21st century. In 1936 the first commercial high-voltage direct current (HVDC) line using mercury-arc valves was built between Schenectady and Mechanicville, New York. HVDC had previously been achieved by installing direct current generators in series (a system known as the Thury system) although this suffered from serious reliability issues. In 1957 Siemens demonstrated the first solid-state rectifier (solid-state rectifiers are now the standard for HVDC systems) however it was not until the early 1970s that this technology was used in commercial power systems. In 1959 Westinghouse demonstrated the first circuit breaker that used SF6 as the interrupting medium. SF6 is a far superior dielectric to air and, in recent times, its use has been extended to produce far more compact switching equipment (known as switchgear) and transformers. Many important developments also came from extending innovations in the ICT field to the power engineering field. For example, the development of computers meant load flow studies could be run more efficiently allowing for much better planning of power systems. Advances in information technology and telecommunication also allowed for much better remote control of the power system's switchgear and generators.