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Tether Electronics for DTUsat Electronics for a Satellite Subsystem, Detailed Design and Prototyping Project by Richard Tøpholm Ørsted•DTU AUTOMATION Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Tether Electronics for DTUsat, Detailed Design and Prototyping Project by Richard Tøpholm Technical University of Denmark Ørsted•DTU AUTOMATION As supervisors: Mogens Blanke, Ørsted•DTU Claus Kjærgaard, Øersted•DTU Summer and Fall 2002 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Abstract In the summer of 2001, a student project was initiated at DTU, with the goal of designing and building a satellite. This student satellite is named DTUSat, and that fall I wrote a report (“Electrodynamic Tether for DTUsat”, Feb. 2002) on the investigation and design of an Electrodynamic Tether payload for it. This electrodynamic tether is a long conducting wire, which is deployed from the satellite. As the tether moves through the Earths magnetic field at orbital speeds, electrodynamic forces act on it. It can thus be considered a means of propulsion that does not expend fuel, saving weight and money. The needed electronics to control this tether has been developed from sketch to prototype in the present project the summer and fall 2002, as reported here. Chapters 1 “Introduction” and section 3.3 “Electron Emitter” are quoted almost verbatim from my earlier report. Abstract page i Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Contents Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 Space Tether Systems 1.1.1 Free Fall 1.1.2 Vacuum 1.1.3 Magnetic Field 1.1.4 Ionospheric Plasma 1.2 Electrodynamic Tethers Chapter 2 Motivation 2.1 Requirements Chapter 3 Theory 6 6 7 7 7 7 8 10 10 12 3.1 Tether System 12 3.2 Voltages 12 3.3 Electron Emitter 13 Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration 4.1 The elements 4.1.1 The Tether 4.1.2 Emitter 4.1.3 Chassis Contents 17 17 18 19 20 page ii Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 4.1.4 Plasma 21 4.2 Connection Logic 21 4.3 Considered Connections 23 4.3.1 Simple Passive 4.3.2 Original 4.3.3 Efficient with Grounding 4.3.4 Efficient using EMF 4.3.5 Floating Gate 4.3.6 Power Generating Design 24 24 24 25 25 26 4.4 Selection of Connections 26 4.5 Overall Circuit 30 Chapter 5 4.5.1 Measurements 30 Special Challenges 32 5.1 High Voltage generation 32 5.2 Isolation 33 5.3 Isolated Low Current Measurements 33 Chapter 6 Design Details 37 6.1 Filtering 38 6.2 Measurements 39 6.2.1 Current S-G 6.2.2 Current S-T 6.2.3 Current E-T 6.2.4 Voltage T 6.3 Power Supply Contents 39 40 41 42 43 page iii Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 6.4 DC/DC Regulators 45 6.5 High voltage switching 47 Chapter 7 Component Selection 49 7.1 High voltage converters 49 7.2 Isolation 51 7.2.1 Isolation Amplifiers 7.2.2 Optical Switches 7.2.3 Optocouplers 7.2.4 Linear Optocouplers 7.2.5 Magnetic Sensors 7.3 I/O devices 7.3.1 ADC 7.3.2 DAC 7.3.3 References 7.3.4 SPI Switches 7.3.5 SPI Potentiometers 51 52 53 54 55 55 55 56 56 56 57 7.4 DC/DC regulators 57 7.5 Current Sense & Limit 58 7.6 Other Active 58 7.6.1 Linear Regulators 7.6.2 Op-Amps 7.6.3 Transistor 7.7 Passives 7.7.1 Power Inductors 7.7.2 Diodes 7.7.3 Resistor/Capacitor Contents 58 59 60 60 60 61 61 page iv Richard Tøpholm Chapter 8 Tether Electronics for DTUsat Prototype 63 8.1 Layout 63 8.2 Measurements 64 Chapter 9 8.2.1 Switch leakage 8.2.2 Tether current measurement 8.2.3 ADC 64 66 68 Conclusion 70 Appendix A Thermal Considerations 71 Appendix B Monitoring DC anode current of a groundedcathode photomultiplier tube 73 Appendix C Diagram 75 Appendix D Prototype Layout 77 Appendix E Tether current measurements on Prototype 79 Appendix F Tether Parameters 81 Appendix G Selected Component Data sheets 83 Contents page v Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 1 Introduction The CubeSat Project* is a framework for picosatellites of fixed dimensions to be launched in groups as a single payload, thereby drastically reducing the price and test requirements for launch. Figure 1: CubeSat deployment mechanism. Stanford University. This provided a unique opportunity for a group of students at DTU to begin realistically pursuing a student picosatellites in spring 2001. The project was formalized in that summer, and the satellite named DTUSat. In fall 2001, the team behind DTUSat consisted of ~40 students, working on the definition and design of the sub-systems of the satellite. In 2002, the project has reached prototype stages for all subsystems, and a launch opportunity has been identified, for early 2003. 1.1 Space Tether Systems While a wire or tether is seemingly the very simplest of technologies, its application to space systems still remains a science project. The reason a tether in space is considered so different from the earthbound version, is mainly the very different environment in which they are used, allowing novel applications. * CubeSat is a project of Stanford University's Space Systems Development Laboratory Chapter 1 Introduction page 6 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 1.1.1 Free Fall A tether in space is usually placed in free fall, in either interplanetary space, or orbiting a massive central body. In true zero gravity there is no limit to the length of the tether, whereas in the micro-gravity of orbit the possible length of a tether is limited but still magnitudes above that which is possible on earth. 1.1.2 Vacuum Secondly, the tether is moving in vacuum at speed of several kilometres per second. Vacuum implies drag free movement, which allows very weak disturbing forces to give rise to significant motions, as they integrate over time in a system where the some of the dynamics can be free of dampening. 1.1.3 Magnetic Field Non-geostationary motion will usually imply a movement through a huge inhomogeneous magnetic field, with a relative motion of several kilometres per second. If the tether is conductive, this movement can induce a large e.m.f. across the tether. 1.1.4 Ionospheric Plasma The vacuum of space is by no means perfect. In the ionosphere of earth, the surroundings are conductive plasma, consisting of free ions and electrons at temperatures of 1000K to 3000K. This will both have corrosive effects on materials, but also have implications when the induced e.m.f. puts the ends of a tether at different potentials with regard to the plasma, which is the subject of the next section. Chapter 1 Introduction page 7 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 1.2 Electrodynamic Tethers An electrodynamic tether consists of a conducting wire, dragged through a magnetic field. In a prograde* earth orbit, this will induce a voltage across the tether, with positive at the high end, and thus try to drive a current up the tether. Ejecting electrons to the surrounding plasma at the low end, and capturing electrons from the plasma at the high end, will close the circuit externally. With the circuit closed, a current will run and power be dissipated in it. This power comes from Figure 2: The forces on an electrodynamic teththe mechanical energy of the er in orbit. orbit, which is thus decreased (by Lorenz forces on the tether). This is a completely analogue to the principle of an electrical generator. The opposite mode of operation is also possible. Ejecting electrons at the high end, and capturing them at the low end will reverse the current. Many problems are implicit in this mode of operations. If we assume the potential of the surrounding plasma to be somewhere in between the potentials of the ends of the tether, the ejection of electrons will be against the electrical field. This requires power, as does the capture of electrons * An orbit which eastwards movement around the Earth (same as Earths rotation) is called pro-grade, while a westerly orbit (against the Earths rotation) is retro-grade. Chapter 1 Introduction page 8 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat at the other end. This means the power must entered into the electrical system to force a current. This power is added to the mechanical energy of the orbit, and the tether system becomes an analogue to an electrical motor. Practical problems like the ejected electrons trying to short the circuit by returning at once to the tether in same end as they are ejected from must be solved by isolating the tether. This is a nontrivial problem, which caused the failure of the recent Italian/NASA TSS-1R shuttle mission, in which a spark breached the isolation of the tether, which was subsequently severed by the ensuing discharge arc. Electrodynamic tethers allow for the direct – propellant-less - conversion between electrical energy and mechanical orbital energy. This can be used to boost a spacecraft with energy from solar cells, instead of propellant. Alternatively, it can provide a spacecraft with energy, while lowering its orbit. A reversible system can temporarily store excess energy by raising the orbit, and later retrieve the stored energy when supplies are low, by lowering the orbit. The possibilities of combining momentum transfer with electrodynamic tethers are many, as momentum transfer manoeuvres which raises the orbit of a payload will leave the tether in a lower orbit, which may later be raised or deorbited by electrodynamics. Chapter 1 Introduction page 9 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 2 Motivation The DTUSat payload group has decided to build an Electrodynamic Tether Payload for DTUSat. As systems design of the payload was completed in early 2002, which is the motivation for this project. Parallel work is ongoing for the other aspects of the Tether Payload (notably the Electron Emitter, and Deployment Mechanic). The aim of this project is to demonstrate working electronics for the subsystem, in a prototype form (i.e. using a prototype layout of a design as close to final as possible). 2.1 Requirements The requirements for the electronics are primarily to power the electron emitters, and measure all operational data, if possible. The size is obviously to be kept to a minimum, as the total size of the satellite is 100x100x100mm. This also has the crucial side effect of minimizing mass – which is likewise needed. The total mass of the satellite is to be kept below 1 kg – of which the electronics should preferably be less than 40g. Power electron emitters - expected 1mA at 70-150V Gather operational measurements Low power use Low size and mass Chapter 2 Motivation page 10 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The satellite orbit is now known to be sun-synchronous near 98° inclination. Orbital height is around 900km. This is operationally the “worst case” orbit for the tether – however has the nice side effect, that the tether will be deployed “downwards” (towards the Earth), which means that the camera will be facing in the same direction. This could enable oscillations in the tether to be observed by the camera. Observations or other measurements of the oscillations are a requirement for using active control for dampening. Chapter 2 Motivation page 11 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 3 Theory 3.1 Tether System The decision to use the CubeSat fixed the weight at 1000g, and the size as roughly a 100mm side cube. In the first iteration of the following design process, it was assumed that the payload would be allowed to use one fifth of mass and size. Due to growing subsystems, as specifications got more solid, and the addition of a camera payload, the allowed mass of the tether has since dropped to 100g. As I from the beginning indicated, that the tether could be designed to any weight, simply by changing dimensions of the tether, it probably seemed easiest to squeeze this payload. This admission was probably a tactical mistake, as no other subsystem group indicated anything similar. As it stands now, the payload has been defined to consist of an electrodynamic tether, and a camera, that will take pictures of the Earth, and the deployment of the tether. The tether subsystem is allowed to use 100g. including structural supports, and should if possible stay within a 25x65x65mm box. The electronics can be located on a print outside this envelope 3.2 Voltages The voltage induced in the tether depends on the horizontal B-field, normal to the velocity vector. It will vary from –96V/km to +58V/km, for our orbit. We only conduct a current when it is negative, as we need to expel electrons from the Chapter 3 Theory page 12 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat satellite. The average induced voltage is then –30V/km, when positive values are set to zero. Since we wont be conducting any current the “other way”, this is the interesting information, i.e. the “effective” average induced voltage. The bias of the tether is controlled by several factors. If very small currents are flowing, the high mobility of electrons compared to ions will drive the positive (electron collecting) end towards zero (relative to the background plasma potential). The satellite will thus become negative, if connected to the tether. If the electron emitter emits large currents, the satellite will be driven towards positive potential. When the potential of the satellite becomes positive relative to the plasma, the ejected electrons will begin to return to the satellite, limiting the net ejected electrons. It can be assume that the satellite cannot be driven much above zero by electron emission (unless - perhaps - large accelerating potentials are used). With the satellite at zero then, the maximum current collected by the tether will be dictated by the induced bias, when we can’t add to the bias. This current is determined by OML Langmuir theory, as our tether is certainly going to be inside the OML regime. In short: Because we have decided to NOT raise the tether potential, by generating a positive voltage potential between the tether and the satellite, we are confined to electrodynamic drag operation of the tether, and the bias voltage of the tether is limited to the induced e.m.f. 3.3 Electron Emitter Emitting electrons is part of closing the tether circuit through the ionosphere. It can be done passively, in the sense, that a large passive conductor (with sufficient bias) will collect small amounts of ions, which is almost equivalent to ejecting electrons due to recombination on the surface. In practice however, it is always done by active means. The basic principle of an active electron emitter is the generation of free electrons, which are then accelerated away from the emitter by an acceleration potential. If the emitter is biased negative with regards to the Chapter 3 Theory page 13 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat surrounding plasma, the electrons will drift away, and this bias may do the job of accelerating potential. Alternatively, an accelerating grid with a positive potential relative to the electron cloud can be placed in front of the electrons, for accelerating them. If this grid is the outer grid, and has a positive bias with regard to the plasma potential, the electrons will be decelerated again after leaving the grid, possibly even returning to the satellite. The energy needed to liberate an electron from surface varies with the material, is known as the workfunction of the material, and usually measured in eV. The cheapest active emitter is a heated filament, which will boil off electrons. This could be a tungsten wire, which was heated, until a cloud of electrons exists around the wire (thermionic emission). The energy for liberating the electrons are supplied thermally, which is not very effective, but has the advantage of not needing a high voltage supply. When used with an accelerating grid, this assembly is known as an electron gun. They are best known for their use in cathode ray tubes, i.e. standard television sets, where the electrons are used to draw the image on the phosphor. The emitter used on the prior electrodynamic tether experiments, have all been a hollow cathode plasma contactor. This ionises a gas, which is then slowly expulsed, thus augmenting the local plasma density, to a point where it is sufficiently conductive. Hollow cathodes are popular because they can reverse the current, and because they can be run “passively”, i.e. not actively driving a current. In this way, they can be used to ground a satellite with regard to ambient plasma potential. They require a pressure-vessel with gas, which is used during operation. The last active emitter is the Field Effect Emitter. The principle is that electrons may be liberated from the substrate by intense electric fields, instead of by thermal energy. The high fields are accomplished by placing an acceleration grid very close to the source. The source is Chapter 3 Theory Figure 3: FEAC from Agüero and Adamo, 2000. Peak size is ¾μm. page 14 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat the shaped with peaks, because the electric field is stronger around a peak. In order to work with reasonable acceleration potentials, the distance to the grid has to be on the order of single μm. This type of emitter has many advantages. They are small and light, and the energy consumption is very low compared to the alternatives. The current per peak is from 0.01μA to 100μA, for controlling voltages of 50-500V. In some technologies, like the Spindt Cathode, the peaks can be readily integrated by photolithography, and 10.000 peak arrays have been demonstrated by Agüero and Adamo, 2000*. As the sharpness of the peak is determining for the voltage required, nano-wires are sometimes used. The problems with FEAC’s are their small scale, which makes them susceptible to sputtering and oxidation by atomic oxygen. This problem can be alleviated by choosing a tip material, which is noble, like gold or beryllium. The problem is that these materials often also have large workfunktions. Another way of reducing oxidizing and sputtering, is to use several grids in front of the peaks. The grids can be configured to both accelerate the electrons, and repel ions (Marrese, 2001). For DTUSat, a field effect based solution would be optimal, because it is small and light, and has low power requirements. MIC and KU are involved in this aspect of the project, with a view to produce FEAC’s with a surface * Figure 4: FEAC design with multible grids, for both performace and ion protection. Arrays of field effect emitters are called FEAC’s: Field Effect Array Cathode’s, or just FEA’s. Chapter 3 Theory page 15 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat area of 2cm², and able to emit at least one µA with bias potentials around 100V. As the average induced voltage is close to 30V, this voltage has to be generated by the electronics. Chapter 3 Theory page 16 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration The primary function of the electronics is to provide the necessary bias voltage for the emitter. As the tether is being used in the current generating configuration, this voltage could actually be provided by the tether – had it been long enough. This however is dependent on the configuration. In prior work, I identified a single configuration, with the emphasis on safety. It would connect both the tether and the emitter gate to the chassis. The emitter cathode would be supplied with a high-voltage supply. This is only one of several possible configurations, which will all be explored here. 4.1 The elements The external elements to be connected are Tether, Emitter Chassis and Plasma. They are covered as such here, and simple but reasonable equivalents are considered. G T Satellite Chassis E her Tet m 0 70 Plasma Electron emission to ionospheric plasma FEAC emitter Figure 6: 5 The external elements connected by the electronics Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 17 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 4.1.1 The Tether The tether is of course a wire, but as it is deployed, it will induce a voltage. As such, we can model it as a voltage supply. It has an internal resistance, which is the resistance of the tether wire itself. Assuming a 700m aluminium wire with a cross section of Ø 0.2mm, it will have an internal resistance of 670Ω (see Appendix F : Tether Parameters on page 81). Unfortunately, this is not quite so simple. While one end of the tether will be connected to the satellite, the other will connect to plasma by collecting electrons and ions. This connection however will not happen at the end of the tether, rather along the whole length of it. This means that the current will not be constant along the length of the tether, and the resistance (which is distributed evenly along the tether) will not act evenly on the current either. In order to handle this complexity, I look first at the case where very little current is running, compared to the collecting capability of the tether. Electrons are more mobile than ions, and so will be collected more easily. Thus in this case, where almost no current is running to the satellite, electrons will be collected over a short stretch of tether furthest from the satellite, while ions will be collected over the rest of the tether – resulting in a net current running along the tether (so called ram-current). This current is not avoidable in our case, meaning it will not be possible to turn the tether completely off. The electron collection stops and is replaced by ion collection at the point of the tether, where the tether potential is equal to the plasma potential (actually there is an offset of around 0.3V, because of the higher electron mobility, but this is negligible in our case). This point will also be the point of highest current density in the tether. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 18 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat When the current to the satellite is increased, the zero-point will move towards the satellite, increasing the effective collecting area of the tether. The zero-point reaches the satellite when the current is equal to IOML. A “quick and dirty” model of the tether and plasma connection, is thus the plasma connected to a voltage generator with an output of VEMF, in series with a resistor defined as RL = VEMF/IOML. This means that when the current reaches IOML, all the generated voltage is lost in the resistor, so the resultant output is the plasma potential. In addition to this comes the internal resistance from the aluminium. From the previous chapter, we have a value of IOML = 29mA for 700m tether inducing 21V. This corresponds to 720 Ω, to which should be added the aluminium resistance of 670 Ω, yielding a total resistance of 1.4 kΩ. In this case, the tether then can be modelled as a 21V generator, with an internal resistance of 1.4 kΩ, connected with the positive pole to the surrounding plasma (P), and the negative pole (T) to the electronics. 4.1.2 Emitter The emitter will emit a stream of electrons to the surrounding plasma, with the magnitude dependent on the voltage between the cathode tips (E) and the gate (G). G should be positive with regards to E, to generate a field emission. This corresponds to a positive current from the plasma (P) to the cathode tips (E). A small percentage of the electron current will hit the gates, giving a positive leakage current from the gate (G) to the emitter (E). This is presumably a fixed percentage, which together with the emissions non-linear dependence on G-E voltage makes the device look like a bipolar NPN transistor, with G as the basis, E as the emitter, and the collector connected to the plasma P. It is however peculiar in that the G-E voltage will be in the order of 60-120V to achieve a collector current of a mA. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 19 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Actually, it might be more correct to refer to it as a Triode rather than a transistor, with the anode being the plasma. Triodes are devices very similar to a FEAC, although they are heated in order to allow thermionic emission, whereas the FEAC work by field emission, i.e. by having a large electrical field at the cathode. The expected current amplification is around 100, but this has yet to be experimentally verified. 4.1.3 Chassis The chassis of the satellite is connected to power ground at one point only – in the radio. Due to the radio-transmitter emitting EM waves from antenna’s located close to the chassis, it must be expected that various points of the chassis will assume high AC voltages, with a frequency of 435Mhz. It is therefore not possible to connect points on the chassis directly to the electronics, without an appropriate choke in between. The DC potential of the chassis will however, be connected very effectively to power ground. The chassis of the satellite (S) will also constitute a considerable electron/ion-collecting surface. For this reason, it can be considered as being connected to the Plasma (P) with a resistance. The value of said resistance has not been theoretically investigated, however the surface area of the tether is very close to 10 times the surface area of the satellite. The tether further has a known optimal shape for collecting electron, which the satellite does not. It seems reasonable to assume that the apparent resistance between satellite (S) and plasma (P) is more than 10 times larger than the one between the tether and Plasma. Further, the resistance was calculated for the collection of electrons, i.e. with the tether at positive potential re plasma. The satellite however, can be assumed negative re Plasma (it is after all connected to the negative end of an electron collecting tether). This means that the connection to plasma will collect ions, which are less mobile. The larger dimensions of the satellite may mitigate this to some Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 20 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat degree, as a large portion of the collection will be by actually hitting ions, rather than the ions deflecting to hit the satellite. I will assume that the satellite (S) is connected to plasma by a resistor of 70 kΩ. 4.1.4 Plasma The plasma surrounds the satellite and tether. The connection to the various parts of the satellite has already been discussed above. Internally the plasma can be considered a perfect conductor, because of its very large cross section. The possible connection of terminals T,S,E,G is explored in detail in the rest of this section. 4.2 Connection Logic The objective for the connections is to allow a current to run from E to T, while maintaining a large voltage differential between G and E. This while using as little power as possible. The emitter- tether current should reach a few milli-amps, while the expected gate-current is 100 times less. The electronics have a number of voltage sources available. The in- Figure 7: Equivalent diagrams for the connected elements. Positive current-arrows shown. T Induced EMF 0-200V Typ 20V S r the Te 670 70k Satellite Chassis G Electron emission to ionosphere E FEAC emitter Plasma 720 Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 21 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat ternal power supplies are V3.6 and the unregulated Vunreg, which are 3.6V and 2V-5.5V above power ground respectively. Externally the power ground is DC connected to the chassis S, which has a rest potential close to zero (re plasma). The tether terminal T on the other hand will be near -VEMF at rest, which is typically -20V re plasma. In studying the possible connection, I will adopt the plasma potential as zero, measuring other potentials relative to this. There is however the restriction, that the internal power lines should not be connected directly to external elements, in order to avoid injection of 430Mhz noise (from our radio transmission) into the electronics. To keep a positive voltage on Gate relative to Emitter, it would seem simple and logic to connect Gate to the most positive external point, which is the chassis (S) and Emitter to the most negative: the tether - T. This further allows a current to run from E to T, which was needed anyway. This has the great value of being completely passive, i.e. drawing no current from the power supply. It will thus work, regardless of the state of the satellite electronics. This “Simple Passive” configuration is shown below: FEAC emitter E T Electron emission to ionospheric plasma G S Induced EMF 0-200V Typ 20V r the Te Satellite Chassis 670 70k Plasma 720 Figure 8: Simple Passive connection of tether to emitter, and gate to chassis. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 22 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat There are certain problems with this simple passive connection. First off, the tether might not induce enough voltage for the emitter to work. Actually, it will typically induce only 20V, which is not enough. Second, there could be a safety concern with the tether being at a different potential from the rest of the satellite. This implies that there is a risk of short circuit between the tether and the satellite structure (which further has an AC potential). Third, the leak-current into the gate of the emitter must be supplied by ion-capture on the structure. If the assumption of 70 kΩ from satellite to plasma holds, this should not be a problem for low emitted currents. The Simple Passive configuration can be improved in several ways to improve performance and/or safety. It is however perfect in regard to simplicity and reliability: It will work even during a complete loss of onboard power. In order to augment the voltage supplied, a small boost could be had from connecting the gate to V3.6 instead of chassis. This is a very small gain, and hardly worth the bother, as an efficient AC choke will be required. A more worthwhile approach is to insert a “high”-voltage supply (~100V) to either lower the Emitter potential, or raise the Gate potential (or both). 4.3 Considered Connections In the diagrams of the connections, I will try to maintain higher potentials above lower potentials. The basis for the numbers, is 30V induced EMF, 1mA tether current, 100V gate-emitter voltage, and 1% gate current (0,01mA). The diagrams are simplified as much as possible, showing only the connections between T, S, E and G. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 23 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 4.3.1 Simple Passive The connection diagram for the Simple Passive configuration is shown right. It is a short form of Figure 8. S T G E It uses the EMF to power the emitter, and the tether is not grounded, which might give concerns. Figure 9: Simple Passive Performance is very low, however it works even when all power fails, and could be considered for a fail-safe or backup solution. Power consumption is 0W 4.3.2 Original The connection used in Electrodynamic Tether for DTUsat, was chosen for maximum safety. It had both the Tether and the Gate connected to the Chassis, ensuring that all external parts were at equipotential (although not at plasma potential). This is not a very efficient combination however, as the generator will supply 1mA at 100V i.e. 100mW. It is however more or less guarantied to work. S T G E Figure 10: Original 4.3.3 Efficient with Grounding An efficiency optimisation of the original configuration is to have the voltage generator in the Gate connection rather than the Emitter. The gate is expected to draw 100 times less current, thus lowering the power consumption of the circuit dramatically to only 1mW. However, the Gate is no longer connected to the Chassis. Having an external surface (the gate electrode) is at a different potential from the Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration G S T E Figure 11: Efficient grounded page 24 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat rest of the satellite, could be a potential source of problems. The tether is however still grounded to the chassis, eliminating the greatest concerns. 4.3.4 Efficient using EMF An even more efficient design is to decouple the tether from the chassis. This allows the induced voltage to aid in generating the voltage for the gate-emitter. The voltage generator is still delivering the low current of the gate, but now at a somewhat lower voltage, thus lowering the power consumption even more to 0.7mW. However, this is no safer than the first “Simple Passive” connection. G S T E Figure 12: Most Efficient 4.3.5 Floating Gate A completely different approach, which was explored by the DTUsat Tether team at the University of Copenhagen, was to use photo-emitting materials. While it proved unpractical to generate enough photocurrent, to work as a primary emitter, they could probably well be used to raise the Figure 13: Floating gate potential of the gate. In effect, this will multiply their photocurrent by a factor of 100. This assumes that they will continue to emit, even while 100V above the plasma voltage. In practice, a part of the emitted electrons will be deflected back by the negative plasma, depending on the energy transferred to the electrons. This is something, which will require extra hardware (the photo-emitting material), and is unlikely to be made for DTUsat. However it will be shown later in this text, that the addition of this current source is very simple in the electronics. G S T E Power consumption is basically 0W, however the design could be combined with other elements, if performance was not sufficient. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 25 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 4.3.6 Power Generating Design A further development of the efficient designs would be to extract energy from the tether current. This could be accomplished by having a generator in the gate path, and in the emitter path. The last would be polarized opposite the configurations used above, such that the tether current would run into the generator. The generator should thus draw power from the tether current, and presumably de- S T G 90V E 20V liver it to the satellite power management system. In the case shown to the right, a Figure 14: Generating design tether current of 1mA would generate 20mW of power, while the gate current would drawn only 0.9mW (assuming the FEAC has 70V+EMF as gate-emitter voltage, and a current amplification of 100). The net power supplied by this circuit would thus be ~19mW. The generating designs are not explored further in this text. They have been deemed possible but complicated, and of little theoretical value. I.e. this might be an incentive for commercial use of tethers, but it is not something DTU will learn from doing. 4.4 Selection of Connections There is a conflict of interests when choosing the configuration. While on one hand, the Original configuration is the safest way, in that it will remove the possibility of short-circuits between tether and satellite, the Efficient configurations will allow higher performance. The Simple Passive has another benefit: It will continue working, should the electronics onboard the satellite fail – ensuring long-term operation, although the selection of a polar circuit all but made this configuration unusable. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 26 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat As several of the circuits have connections in common, I have tried to explore how many of them could be realized with simple ways of switching between them. It was quickly seen that all had the emitter connected to the tether (sometimes through a voltage supply), and all had the gate connected to the chassis (sometimes through a voltage supply). Further, sometimes the chassis was connected to the tether. There is however, no simple way to switch a voltage generator so that is can be used to either raise potential of the gate, or lower the emitter. Although one connection is in both cases chassis, it is not the same pole of he generator. It would thus be necessary to have a doublethrow switch on each pole of the generator to switch between the original and the efficient configuration. As shown right. G S The Figure show the generator used for boosting the gate voltage (Efficient Configuration), however notice that the tether is not connected to the T E emitter, as it should. This will Figure 14: Switched design. require another two doublethrow switches (or one big Notice: Half the switches are missing. quadruple-pole double-throw I.e. T and E are not connected here. switch) to make the direct connection between S-G or T-E. If it should further be desirable to use the passive connection, it must be possible to disconnect the generator completely, i.e. at least one of the switches in Figure 14 should have an off position too. When this is chosen, both S-G and T-E should be connected. The number of switches is quickly becoming impractical. The complexity does not seem to be worth the gain. However, if the figure is studied, it is seen that current always Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 27 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat flows in the same direction, in the same leads. I.e. the S-G connection always conducts from S to G. The T-E always conducts from E to T. This enables us to replace some of the switches with diodes. For example, the switches needed to connect S-G directly, when the voltage supply is not engaged there, can be replaced by a diode. This is shown to the right (now also, the switch to connect S and T is shown). G S T When the voltage generator is engaged, the diode is back biased, and blocks. It will thus no longer be part of the current path. Using two voltage generators instead of one will do away with the switch completely. This is shown right. There is still a switch to connect the tether to the chassis. Notice that a voltage supply (which would need to be variable anyway) need only be turned off, to make the circuit change configuration. E G S T E This design has the benefit of being able to use a combination of raising the gate, and lowering the emitter voltage, in order to achieve the desired G-E voltage. It further gives redundancy. If one of the voltage supplies were to malfunction – by either short-circuiting or disconnecting - the circuit will still work, as the diodes will allow the current to flow past the defect voltage generator, and the other generator will be able to provide the Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 28 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat needed emitter gate bias. If both generators are turned off, and the S-T switch is closed, the circuit will be passive, as everything is grounded, and the gate-emitter voltage is (near) zero. This is virtually an OFF position. Opening the switch will then make the circuit work according to the passive simple configuration, with S-T and T-E connected directly (through diodes as it is). If the bias is insufficient to drive the emitter, the generator connected to either the gate or the emitter (or both), may then be turned on. If shorts between tether and satellite are a concern, the switch may in addition be closed. Depending on what is turned on the circuit will work as follows: Switch GateEmitterResulting Function Generator Generator Closed OFF OFF OFF Closed ON OFF Efficient with Grounding (4.3.3) Closed OFF ON Original (4.3.2) Closed ON ON Combination of the above Open OFF OFF Simple Passive (4.3.1) Open ON OFF Efficient using EMF (4.3.4) Open OFF ON Hybrid configuration Open ON ON Hybrid configuration The last configuration considered used the trick of raising the gate voltage with a photocurrent. This is alluring, although it requires extra hardware. From an electronic point of view, just permanently connecting the photo-emitting plate to the gate, while still using other means to reach Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 29 Richard Tøpholm the desired gate-emitter voltage, should never have bad effects. It will only aid in providing the needed voltage/current for the gate. Just as a precaution, it could be connected by a diode to be sure it does never draw current away from the gate. Other than the added photoemitting plate and the diode, this diagram is the same as the preceding. Tether Electronics for DTUsat G S T E 4.5 Overall Circuit The circuit with two generators, shown in the preceding section, is chosen as suitable – flexible and without major drawbacks. It does have two generators, which could be reduced to one, however that does pay in both redundancy, and freedom to vary one more operational parameter: Now gate-plasma voltage can (within limits), be adjusted independently of gate-emitter bias. The possibility to add a photo-emitting surface is gained simply by adding one diode. This is not further explored in this report, as it would be possible at any time, and would not influence the rest. 4.5.1 Measurements As much as possible state information about the tether operation should be recorded. This will help both provide useful data, and debugging information. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration page 30 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat First, the current in the tether is interesting. Next the current in the gate. If the switch S-T is closed, the current in it might be interesting too. If it is open, the voltage across it is surely interesting. The voltage added is commanded, and so should be known – though it wouldn’t hurt to Current S-G measure it too. The needed measurement points are shown in this figure. G S Remember that the Chassis S is DC at electrical ground. This means that measuring relative to it is simple. For this reason, two of the measurement points are referenced to S. The current in and voltage of the Tether however, is not so simple. Chapter 4 Electrical Configuration Current S-T Voltage T T Current E-T E Figure 15: Measurement points page 31 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 5 Special Challenges 5.1 High Voltage generation The emitter must be supplied with a gate-cathode bias of typically 100V. This should further be floating with respect to the satellite electronics. The output voltage should be variable, and able to turn off. 40 – 120V is desired, and the emitter current is expected to reach at least 1mA, perhaps more. The gate current is expected to be 100 times less than the emitter current. While we don’t expect currents much beyond 1mA emitted, the cost of allowing more than 10µA gate current is virtually zero, as all components considered can supply this. It has therefore been decided that the gate-generator should be able to supply the full emitter bias voltage of at least 120V, with at least 100µA. This will allow us to attempt to emit up to 10mA, although without the use of the emitter generator. When using the emitter generator, it is well acceptable to limit the emitted current to 1mA. Another reason for the 1mA limit on the emitter-generator is that the power supply might not be able to supply that power to us for extended periods (1mA at 120V correspond to 40mA at 3.3V, but at an expected efficiency which could be low, say 25%, it becomes 120mA, which is more than we can expect continuously). EMCO Highvoltage’s Q-series DC/DC converters were identified (se the components chapter). They produce an output proportional to the input, and come in a plethora of version. They turn on at 0.7V input and have a max input of 5,12 or 24V, depending on version. Chapter 5 Special Challenges page 32 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Output at max input is 100V - 20,000V depending on version. 5.2 Isolation One of the major problems with the design of the tether electronics is that the currents to be measured are not at potentials inside the supply rails. Even the currents, which are running close to ground, are contaminated with radio-noise. This can be handled by decoupling and highimpedance ADC interfaces. That still leaves the two major problems of measuring the tether current at –200V, and of switching the gate-current at +200V, which could be less than 1µA. 5.3 Isolated Low Current Measurements The Current G and ST can easily be found by running the current through a sense resistor. This resistor should be small enough that it does not affect the operation, yet large enough to give a usable signal. Since the voltages are in the order 100V, a voltage drop of a volt or two across the resistors is not a problem. As the current runs from S to G/T, the voltages measured are going to be negative (a current will drop across the resistors, from S, which is at zero volt DC). The measurement itself should be high-impedance, and filtered to avoid AC components. As the ADC is not going to tolerate input voltages outside the supply rails (which are 0-3.3V), the voltage must be inverted before measurements. Measuring the current from T to E is bothersome, as the potential can be as low as –200V relative to our supplies. The usual approach would be an isolation amplifier, but for reasons detailed in 7.2.1 Isolation Amplifiers p. 51, this was not practical. Instead, I looked to magnetic hall sensing and optically coupled solutions. A Hall-effect sensor, can measure the magnetic field of a DC current in an inductor (which might even be just a wire). It has problems in our Chapter 5 Special Challenges page 33 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat case, however, as the field produced must be large enough that the Earths field does not influence measurements, and small enough that the field does not influence the ACDS sub-system measurements of the Earths field. This is not as impossible as it sounds, as the field being measured drops rapidly with distance. Unfortunately, the solution would still require manual manufacturing of the sensing head, as no such are available for measuring in the desired current range (10µA to 10mA). Instead, an optical method was focused on. Optocouplers in general are very non-linear, i.e. their current transfer ratio (CTR) varies with (among other things) the current. To avoid this problem, usually the measurement is made on the isolated (high voltage) side, and transferred in pulse trains (current to frequency) or by using a linear optocoupler. Neither is in usual possible, without power available on the high-voltage side. Linear optocouplers consist of an optocoupler with two output photodiodes as shown to the right. The current IF in the input LED, will make a current run in both of the output photodiodes IPD1 and IPD2. The transfer gain K3 = IPD1 / IPD2 is very constant over the input range, and Figure 16: Linear Optocoupler temperature, hence the linearity. Notice that the gain K1 = IPD1 / IF is not constant. Optocouplers with photodiode outputs do not act like the normal optocouplers with transistor outputs. While a transistor opens to allow a current to flow, photodiodes generate a current, which is forced to flow. This is similar in principle to a solar cell. Notice that if this current is not allowed to run, the photodiodes will increase forward bias until either the current runs, or the biasing exceed ~1V – 1.5V, at which point the current will run through the diodes them- Chapter 5 Special Challenges page 34 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat selves, i.e. they can short-circuit themselves. If on the other hand, they are reverse biased too much, it will negatively affect linearity. Usually linear optocouplers are employed as with a op-amp on the input side, the output of which will provide the input for the LED, adjusting it to achieve the current to be transferred at IPD1. This current can then be “read” isolated on the other side, at IPD2. This set-up is shown below. Figure 17: Typical isolated amplifier, using a linear optocoupler The op-amp on the left makes sure that the current IF is maintained so the current to be measured is always running in IPD1, In effect a servo loop is closed around the optocoupler on the input side. This is characteristic of all generic linear optocoupler circuits. Unfortunately, there is no supply to power an op-amp on the input side in our application. It might be possible to design a circuit, where an op-amp was driven by the tether current, and but it would not have enough current to drive the input LED of the linear optocoupler. A novel design was discovered in an article by S. Argirò et al., Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research section A 435 (1999): 484-489. In particular, see section 3, on page 485 to 488. This text is included in Appendix B Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded-cathode photomultiplier tube on page 73. The principle is that the loop is closed on the output side of the linear amplifier, but as the error signal is present on the input side, the error signal has to be transmitted to the output side by a standard optocoupler. Chapter 5 Special Challenges page 35 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat This optocoupler will be powered directly by the error-current, it thus becomes important to find an optocoupler that will turn on at very low input currents. What really make this circuit shine is that it consists only of the two optocouplers, and one transistor! In fact, if the two optocouplers have enough CTR to give the desired open look gain, the transistor might not even be necessary. Most linear optocouplers have low CTR, though, so in practice it’s probably needed. The mirrored current is simply the output IPD2. I have build and measured this optical mirror in my prototype, and the results are found in 8.2.2 Tether current measurement, on page 66. The linearity looks excellent, and the offset is only a few µA. The accuracy and simplicity of this solution, made the choice easy. Only a fully integrated isolated amplifier, working off 3.3V could have been easier, had it existed. Chapter 5 Special Challenges page 36 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 6 Design Details 2 2 2 2 2 b1 a1 1 b1 a1 1 b1 a1 b1 b1 a1 a1 SPST SSR 1 1 2 SPST SSR 1 2 b1 2 SPST SSR 1 a1 b1 a1 2 2 SPST SSR 1 b1 b1 a1 2 b1 b1 a1 a1 1 1 1 SPST SSR 1 Vcc Vadj1 C+ VL+ a1 b1 VH+ a1 High Voltage Generator V+ 1 2 An overview of the diagram so far is shown below. A larger version can be found in Appendix C on page 75. SPST SSR GND H VV out VLC -MAX350 1 2 220k -1.5V DC 470k 3 4 1 ~0V DC 1 33k 2 3 4 Satellite Chasis a1 a2 a3 b1 SPI Ctrl b2 b3 a4 b4 a1 b1 a1 b1 a2 8 x SPST b2 a3 /w common b3 a4 b4 5 6 7 8 2 5 6 Electron emission to ionosphere 7 8 1k -1.5V 220k 470k 1 2 Vcc Induced EMF 0-200V Typ 50V 3 4 a1 FEAC emitter a2 4 Channel ADC a3 a4 Vref 200k 700m Tether 20M High Voltage Generator V+ VH+ C+ VL+ Vadj2 GND H VV out VLC -- Vcc Figure 18 Simple diagram The Tether-Emitter and Chassis-Gate current paths are shown bold. The Tether and Chassis connections are on the left (together with a dashed connection representing the plasma-path, and the induced voltage. The connections start with a CL filter, to filter out radio-noise. This is not 100% effective, however all the interfaces to the rest of the electronics are either isolated or high impedance. Chapter 6 Design Details page 37 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The optically coupled current mirror is shown next in the tether current path. The current is mirrored and converted to a voltage by the opamp. In both current paths, there is a high-voltage generator (shown as a stylised transformer), parallel with a diode, which conducts when the voltage generator is off. The generator has an adjustable low-voltage source as input. The Chassis-Tether connection is closed by a optocoupler. Additionally two currents are measured, the Gate and the ChassisTether current. They are measured across two sense resistors, and the voltages are inverted. In the upper right corner of the diagram, is the optocouplers, which select which parts of the emitter’s gate-areas are active. The optocouplers are driven by a SPI controlled switch. In total, there are four measured values: three currents, and one voltage. The voltage (which is negative by 0-200V) is brought into range by voltage division between the actual voltage and the reference voltage. They are converted by an ADC, which outputs data to the onboard computer by SPI. 6.1 Filtering The Tether is a big antenna. For this reason it is important that it is decoupled effectively. First off, it will be connected with a though-hole capacitor, as in enters the satellite body. This will ensure that any large AC current will run in the body of the satellite, not in the electronics inside. This filter is part of the mechanical structure, and does not figure on the print layout. Once inside the body the tether current will run through an inductor, which has been chosen to have maximum reactance at 435MHz (~0,1μH). This will probably be followed by a high-voltage 100pF capacitor to ground. Chapter 6 Design Details page 38 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The connection to the chassis and the emitter-cathodes follow the same rule, although there are no capacitors before the inductor. The emitter-gates are very low current (typ. 10µA), so using a resistor instead of the inductor is reasonable. 6.2 Measurements I will in the following subsections run through the measuring methods, ranges, filtering in detail. 6.2.1 Current S-G The current from Chassis to gate should be measured in order to know (together with the S-T current) the total current drawn from the chassis. It’s also interesting, as it will allow performance data for the emitters to be collected. The current is lead from S through a sense resistor before it passes to the gate-generator. This sense resistor will have one terminal at S, which is at ground potential (DC wise). As the current flows TO the gates, the other terminal will be at negative potential (relative to ground). In order to measure the current, the negative voltage at the sense resistor should be inverted, and AC components filtered out. This is accomplished by an op-amp, which samples the signal through a 220kΩ resistor, and inverts it using a resistor parallel with a capacitor in the feedback path. The gate current is assumed to be 100 times less than the emitter current. The max emitter current using the emitter-generator is 1.6mA. Without the generator, 10mA might be possible, but 4mA is probably realistic. That corresponds to 40µA gate-current. Using a sense resistor of 33kΩ gives -1V at 30µA. This is further enhanced by the op-amp, which amplifies the signal by a ratio of – 470kΩ/220kΩ. The resultant sensitivity is 14.2µA/V, for a range of 035µA with a 2.5V reference, 0-43µA with a 3V reference. Chapter 6 Design Details page 39 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat If the input higher than the range, the op-amp will give an output beyond the reference voltage. This should give max-reading from the ADC, and as the op-amp cannot drive its outputs beyond the supply, it will not be able to damage the ADC. The 470kΩ in the op-amp feedback path is parallel to a capacitor, in order to smooth the results (and remove any RF noise). Measurements are probably going to take place every second, so a filtering time constant of 10mSec is chosen, yielding 22nF for the cap. 6.2.2 Current S-T The measurement of the chassis to tether current, allows us to know the total current from the chassis. This is the current from collected ion’s on the satellite surface, and so holds information about the plasma environment. Measuring this current is similar to the previous (S-G). A sense resistor will have one terminal at S (~GND), and the other terminal will be negative. We do not know for sure how large this current can be, but I assume that steady-state maximum will be around 1 mA. Using the same op-amp coupling as in the S-G measurement, gives a sense-resistor of 1kΩ. Another function of the resistor here is to limit the in-rush current, when the switch closes. As the S-T potential can be up to 200V (although not in our orbit), the current through a 1kΩ resistor will start out as 200mA. From the datasheet of the AQV214S, it is found to have a max continuous DC-current of 120mA (coupled with the two MOS in parallel), and a peak current of 300mA. This should be more than enough, especially as the inductors on the tether and chassis connections will limit the inrush current. A diode is connected in reverse across the measurement + switch, in order to assure that S will never be at lower potential than T. This could happen otherwise if the tether induced EMF voltage reversed (when the field lines reverse. This happens in a near-polar circuit), or when the Chapter 6 Design Details page 40 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat switch was open, if the gates draw more current than the chassis can collect. 6.2.3 Current E-T As mentioned in section 5.3, this current will be measured through a current mirror. The current to be measured flows through the linear optocoupler, which correspondingly sets limits on the range of measurements. The device used in the prototype (IL300 from Vishay), has a typical K1 of only 0.007. With a recommended max input current IF of 20mA, it is only able to mirror currents up to 140µA. This may not be a problem if there is a op-amp on the input side to provide a suitable input range matching, but this op-amp is hard to supply in our set-up. The whole point of the design was after all, to eliminate an isolated supply. As the IL300 was the component ready for the prototype board, the 0140µA is the range of the E-T measurement. This current is translated into the 0-2.5V range of the ADC by an op-amp on the output side, passing the current through a 15kΩ, giving an input range of 167µA, exceeding the IL300 range, allowing us to measure as the IL300 goes into saturation. As detailed in the components section, a better alternative has been found in Agilent HCNR201. With a K1 of typically 48%, minimum 36% and a max-recommended avg. input current of 20mA, this will allow us to measure up to typically 9.6mA and minimum 7.2mA of tether current. A proper choice of resister to measure the current over would be 250Ω. It should be noticed that the currently used op-amps would not be 2.2K able to supply this current. A current divider on the output op-amp, letting a large 100E percentage of the current from the photo10E diode dissipate in a resistor would make this possible though. This principle is shown to the right. At 11mA photocurrent, the circuit shown would have 0.1V forward bias across the photodiode, which should be insignificant. 10mA will run in the 10Ω sense resistor, while only 1mA will run Chapter 6 Design Details page 41 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat sourced from the op-amp, thus reducing it’s power consumption dramatically. The 2.2kΩ output resistor will give 2.2V out in this case. 6.2.4 Voltage T The potential of the tether relative to the satellite, can be measured when the switch between S and T is open. This allows us to measure the EMF when no current is running, and the change when a current runs can give information of the tether behaviour. The EMF can also be calculated from the B-field measurements, so the measurement of the satellite-tether voltage could tell if the length of the tether has changed or the satellite is not near plasma potential. The voltage can have values from –200V up to maybe +30V. If positive, it will be clamped to +0.5V, by the diode across the S-T switch. In order to get the voltage into range, it is divided by a simple resistor voltage divider, between the tether voltage and Vref. Assuming a 2.5V reference, a 470k to 10M division will give a measurement range from –53 to +2.5V. This will be enough for the typically encountered voltages in our orbit. The range is 56V, and assuming 10bit effective resolution, will give accuracy better than 0.06V. From the ADC input to ground is a capacitor, in order to filter out noise on the signal. In the prototype, this was chosen as 100nF, which yields a time constant of 1 second. This might be excessive depending on the use of the measurement. If the voltage is below –53, the division would result in a input to the ADC of less than 0 volt. However, the ADC has internal protection diodes, clamping the inputs to the supply rails ±0.3V. According to the datasheet, they are not to be loaded by more than 2mA, or the conversion accuracy will suffer. -200V on the tether and 0V on the input, would give a current drain from the ADC of 200V/10MΩ – 2.5V/470kΩ = 15µA. This should be quite safe. Chapter 6 Design Details page 42 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 6.3 Power Supply It is necessary to monitor the current consumptions of the circuit for indications of latchup. As some of the devices require very little current, they might be able to latch up, without the total current of the circuit being higher than a normal situation. For this reason, the circuit has been segmented into 4 parts. 1 part for each DC/DC regulator + highvoltage generator. 1 part for driving the LED’s in the PhotoMOS. And 1 part for all the electronics. Each segment is supplied by a MAX890L, which monitors the current to it. The high voltage generators can draw up to 100mA. The DC/DC regulators should have efficiencies of 80-95% when supplying 100mA. Using 75% as worst case, the total current draw is 133mA. In order to avoid false alarms from the current spikes of the DC/DC regulator, a limit of 200mA for each would probably be sensible. That would mean a 6.9kΩ set-resistor for the MAX890L. The closes available at the time of prototype-manufacture, was a 5.6k, yielding 246mA max current. The PhotoMOS are supplied through 220Ω resistors. The PhotoMOS LED’s have a typical VF=1.14V. Assuming minimum 1V, the max current draw is (3.3V-1V)/220Ω = 10.5mA. Typical current will be affected by the SPI switch’s on-resistance of typ. 60Ω. (3.3V1.14V)/(220Ω+60Ω)= 7.7mA. This is reasonable, as the PhotoMOS have recommended IF=5mA, and should probably be derated after radiation damage. For all 7 switches active (a nonsense situation by the way), the maximum current is 73.5mA. This is not likely to be exceeded much even shortly. The chosen set-resistor for the prototype is 15kΩ, yielding 92mA max current The last group is all the “electronics”. This is Voltage reference, ADC, DAC, SPI-SW, 2 double op-amps and the two optocouplers. A quick estimate of their power-requirements follows: Chapter 6 Design Details page 43 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The voltage reference consumes 40µA typical, 75µA max at –40+85°C (+150µA during power up), plus the current is sources at Vref. The ADC consumes typically <1µA when powered down between conversions, and up to max 1.3mA while doing the conversion. It draws up to 250µA from the reference during conversion. The DAC consumes max 205µA, plus max 47µA from the reference, plus whatever current is sourced on the output. The MAX1820 DC/DC regulator will only draw 1µA from the DAC. The SPI switch draws max 30µA. The op-amps draw <1µA each, plus what they source through the feedback path. As one end of the feedback path is on virtual ground in the circuits used, the max current they can source, is for VO=3.3V. Two of them have 470kΩ in the feedback path giving 3.3V/470kΩ = 7µA. The last op-amp sources the current for the current mirror. Assuming the HCBR201, the max-recommended avg. input current IF is 20mA. The mirrored current is 72% (max CTR K1) of this, or 14.4mA. It should be noted however that the current op-amp are not able to source more than 11mA! The max total current draw from the op-amps is thus 3*1µA + 2*7µA = 17µA, plus 14.4mA for the current mirror. The optocoupler uses max 1mA per channel. The linear optocoupler HCBR201 has a max-recommended avg. input current of 20mA, which should be enforced by the load resistor. The total current not including the linear optocoupler, is: 75µA+1.3mA+250µA+205µA+47µA+1µA+30µA+17µA+1µA = 1.926mA Add to that the 20mA to supply the input of the linear optocoupler, and 14.4mA for the output, and the max total current draw becomes 36.3mA. Setting the current limit to 40mA might make the circuit not notice a latchup in one of the components with very low normal power consumption. Chapter 6 Design Details page 44 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat From this it seems that it might be logic to move the supply of the linear optocoupler to the optocoupler group – however while moving the input (the 20mA) would be easy, moving the output entails moving one of the op-amps to the optocoupler group too, which might not be wanted. An option could be to use a transistor on the output of the op-amp, to drive the current to the linear optocoupler output. That would make it easy to move the current drawn to the optocoupler group. This would also overcome the problem, that the op-amp is not presently able to drive the full current of the optocoupler. Another way to go is to limit the current of the current-mirror. It could simply be decided, that the max tether-emitter current was 4mA. Then the input to the linear optocoupler could be limited to 4mA / 36% = 11mA (36% is the minimum CTR K1). The output current should be 4mA for full range, i.e. at 2.5V output from the op-amp (assuming a 2.5Vref). The max would then be (4mA/2.5V)*3.3V = 5.28mA. In total this would limit the linear optocoupler current consumption from 34.4mA to 16.4mA. For the prototype print, the current was limited to 14mA, but the MAX890L limiters appear to be unable to control currents that small. The solution is to use MAX892L or even better a MAX4373 current sense amplifier. 6.4 DC/DC Regulators The input to the high voltage generators should be variable, to allow the regulation of the emitter bias. This would be easy done by a DAC, if it wasn’t that the high voltage generators use quite a lot of current (100mA). A driver on the DAC output would help – it would in practice mean a linear voltage regulator supplying the input for the generators. This is problematic, because the generators may use full current, at low input voltages, resulting in a large power-loss in the drivers/regulators supplying them. This would both be a waste of scarce Chapter 6 Design Details page 45 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat power, and a heat-dissipation concern. To avoid this, I decided to use DC/DC switch mode buck regulators to power the high voltage generators. The MAX1820 chosen has a REF input, to control the voltage. This is connected to directly to the output of the DAC, which means it can be set to any voltage from 0V to Vref. The REF to Vout gain is 1.76, which means that the maximum output voltage of the MAX1820: 3.4V is reached at 1.93V input. The high voltage generators are connected directly to Vout. This output is of course dependent on the unregulated bus being at least the commanded voltage, as the MAX1820 only steps down. If the unregulated bus is below the desired voltage, the load is connected fulltime to the input, (through the inductor, which is less than 1Ω). In case the unregulated bus drops below a threshold of typically 2.35V, the MAX1820 will shut down and stop all current drain, until the input voltage rises again. The MAX1820 has a skip function, enabling it to skip cycles (it otherwise switches at 1MHz, from an internal clock), to lower switching losses when load is low (less than approximately 65mA), which is likely to happen often in our application. This is enabled (SKIP is connected to GND). The external components are calculated from the recommendations in the datasheet. First off, there is no schotky rectifier needed, as it features synchronous rectification, with an internal MOSFET. The compensation network has been populated with a 15kΩ resistor and 22nF capacitor. These values correspond to a converter bandwidth of around 10kHz for the emitter generator, and 50kHz for the gate generator, however this depends on the load impedance of the high voltage generators, which is not well known. If assuming that the generators will draw max 100mA and 20mA respectively, and using half the suggested converter bandwidth fC of Chapter 6 Design Details page 46 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 100kHz, and a 2µF output capacitor, I find the following values for the compensation components. Emitter regulator: 4.1nF and 16.6kΩ. Gate regulator: 20nF and 16.6kΩ. The second compensation capacitor C2 is not needed (~0.5pF). The problem is that all the theory assumes that the load is resistive – which it is not. 22nF and 15kΩ was used in the prototype, along with much larger output capacitors (4.7µF tantalum parallel with 2 ceramic 1µF). This was probably overkill. The size of the inductor is very debateable. Using an expected Vin=4.2V, Vout=2V and 30% p.p. current ripple at Imax=100mA, the ideal value is 35uH. This is inversely proportional to Imax, however, and the selected values mean that the current will become discontinuous below 85mA, which is almost always. The internal synchronous rectifier disconnects the coil from ground, when the current reverses, and generally handles this as a normal mode of operation. Using 50mA for the max current (which is very fair for the gate regulator), gives 70uH. In practice, the max current might well be even smaller. In the prototype, 68uH was used. Physical size of the inductor is debatable as well, the bigger an inductor that can be accommodated, the smaller internal resistance can be had, and thus higher efficiencies. Space however is a premium on the flight prints, so we will probably have to compromise. 6.5 High voltage switching When the tether is operating in a self-powered (passive) mode, the induced voltage in the tether biases the emitter. The one problem with this approach is that it is not controlled. Control is wanted, both to limit the rate, if out of hand, and to allow dampening of oscillations in the tether. A way to overcome this would be to have a variable ballast resistor in the emitter current path. This would introduce unwanted heat dissipation in the resistor, though. The approach taken is to segment the emitter, so that a smaller subsection of it can be activated. This segmentation is done Chapter 6 Design Details page 47 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat at the gate, which is divided into 5 parts. The cathode is unbroken across the whole chip, but only emits, where a gate-bias is present. The first gate-part covers half the emitting area, the next covers one quarter, the third covers one eight, the fourth one sixteenth, and the last half that. There remains an area equal in size to the smallest gate, which is unused. We are blessed with two emitters, and the second was planned used in one big area, as gate number zero, covering one whole emitter. This allows the areas to be turned on, and in a 6-bit fashion determine the effective area. Later it was considered, that it would be smarter to connect the five gate-areas of the two emitters in parallel, and switch of the cathodes of the two emitters. This would allow the same range of operations, although with 1 bit less resolution, when both emitters are on (i.e. at half to full power). This has the advantage of more redundancy, as there are two cathode connections. It also adds the ability to compare equal areas (different from 100%) of the two chips. Switching the gate or cathode currents is complicated by their potential being up to 200V away from the supplies. For this reason, a series of PhotoMOS (optocouplers with MOSFET output) was chosen to switch them. They easily provide the needed isolation. There is however a problem with leakage currents. The gate current, especially to the smallest gate-areas, can significant, while still well below 1 µA. This means that if the switches leak 1 µA, they might as well not be there. This problem is written about at greater length in the components section. Chapter 6 Design Details page 48 Richard Tøpholm Chapter 7 Tether Electronics for DTUsat Component Selection In designing the electronics, the choice of components has probably been one of the most time-consuming parts. The list of considered components, where some specification in the data-sheet wasn’t good enough, is very long. I will go through the selected components in this chapter, but not thoroughly through those not used. The reason for this is primarily the scope. The datasheets for most of the components will be found on accompanying CD media. It counts more than 2000 pages, which is why it is not attached as paper. Should anyone wish to know more detailed about some part of the components selection process, please do not hesitate to contact me. A thermal calculation, which can be found in Appendix A on page 71, shows that we will probably not need components that work outside –10°C to 60°C. But it doesn’t hurt either. I have usually tried to find components with operational range –40°C to 85°C. 7.1 High voltage converters The major concern here was size. The requirements are for a variable output voltage, isolated from the input. The output range should be variable through at least 40-120V (and off!). For the emitter-generator, the design goal has been 1mA. For the gate-generator, 0.1mA (see section 5.1). A list of high-voltage converters was considered, but most 120+V converters do not run on 3.3V input. Many do not have easily variable output voltages, or require external regulation circuits. And all others were both bigger, and used more power than the EMCO Highvoltage Q-series DC/DC converters, which was chosen for the design. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 49 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat They turn on at 0.7V input and have a max input of 5, 12 or 24V dependant on type. The output is proportional to the input in the operational range, with a maximum (at max input) of 100V to 20,000V, for different types, which are seen on the specification sheet listing all the models, in appendix. To obtain a minimal idle power use, the 12V versions are better than the 5V (see the spec. sheets and application notes). Even if we can’t supply them with more than 4V, we’ll just have to select a model rated 3 times our need. On the other hand, selecting a too high output voltage just lowers the maximum output current. They function as transformers, chopping the input voltage to AC, transforming the AC, then rectifying the resultant high voltage AC to the output DC. The linearity from input to output comes directly from the transformation; there is no closed loop regulation of the output. The 0.7V minimum input is the required voltage to power up the chopper. As they are supplied from the unregulated supply to save power, the max input voltage can vary from 2.6 to 5.5V. However, if the battery is down to 2.6, we are surely not going to run the emitters. The DC/DC regulators supplying the input voltage, has a maximum output of 3.4V. This can be maintained with almost no dropout (i.e. with supply voltages down to 3.4V). Realistic full output is therefore always at 3.4V input. The devices have a max rated current (output) which is independent on supplied voltage: Model Current Max Rated Rated Output 0.7V – 3.4V 140% Output at 6V Input Q02-12 2.50mA 12 – 57 140 Q03-12 1.60mA 18 – 85 210 Q04-12 1.25mA 23 – 113 280 Q05-12 1.00mA 29 – 142 350 Chapter 7 Component Selection page 50 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The 140% output at 6V input is shown as a safety margin. The unregulated bus is clamped below 6V by a zener diode, so if there is a shortcircuit in the power-supply, this should be the max consequence. As we don’t expect to need more than 100 – 120V, the Q04-12 or Q05-12 seems ideal for our purpose. Q04-12 is selected for the prototype, while the flight-models will use Q05-12. For the emitter generator max current is important, so a Q03-12 would probably be an even better choice. If the voltage supplied is not enough to reach the desired current, it’s always possible to use the gate generator as well. This choice of generators limits the emitted current to 1.60mA (which it would probably be wise to further derate for space use), when using the emitter generator. However, if the emitter generator is not used, the gategenerator will be able to supply the gate with >1mA, which translates into more than 100mA of emitted current. This exceeds our goals. 7.2 Isolation One of the major problems with the design of the tether electronics is that the currents to be measured are not at potentials inside the supply rails. Even the currents, which are running close to ground, are contaminated with radio-noise. This can be handled by decoupling and highimpedance ADC interfaces. That still leaves the two major problems of measuring the tether current at –200V, and of switching the gate-current at +200V, which could be less than 1µA. 7.2.1 Isolation Amplifiers To measure currents not referenced to the supply, the std. Solution is to use an isolation amplifier (ISA). They have decoupled measuring and out-put parts, and often handle isolated supply of the measuring part internally. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 51 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Unfortunately, every single (small) isolation amplifier I have been able to find, require more than a single 3.3V supply as input. Typical requirements are ±15V supply. A few make do with a single 4.5V supply, but then typically don’t supply the isolated voltage internally. To generate ± 15V would require two additional DC/DC regulators. 4.5V could be done by a simple charge-pump, but if another 4.5V has to be made available isolated, the complexity rises again. In short, I have given up finding a suitable solution using a readymade isolation amplifier. 7.2.2 Optical Switches Switches are needed in two places: To connect the Tether to the Chassis terminal (for safety), and to reduce the gate-current. The first switch should preferably default to an open-circuit, when power fails. This is a Normally Open, or “form A” relay. The gateswitches should default to closed circuit when power fails (Normally Closed = form B). The choice of form A/B is done to make the tether operate, in case of a power-system failure. Mechanical switches (normal relays and reed relays) were dropped because of concern over shock and vibration resistance and vacuum compatibility. Many manufacturers carry series of Optically actuated electronics switches, typically called SSR (Solid State Relays), PhotoMOS or OptoMOS, the latter two referring to the MOS transistor actually switching the output. The major problem is leakage current at high voltages and temperatures. Almost all specify a MAX leakage current of 1µA at 200V, 85°C. The ones chosen were PhotoMOS by Matsushita (sold under the names NAIS and Aromat). Most of their series specify the same max leakages, but they also specify 1nA typical leakage for most products, Chapter 7 Component Selection page 52 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat and actual leakages vs. voltage/temperature graphs seem to indicate that 1µA is very conservative. PhotoMOS further have the benefit of being easily available from DKI. They have a low-leakage RF series, which specify max 10nA leakage. Unfortunately, the RF series are not available in Form B, which was wanted for the gate-switch. The GU-S (General Usage, SOP6) series are used throughout (mostly because of availability). A few RF (SOP6) switches are taken home for testing (they boast 90pA typical, 10nA max leakage). PhotoMOS by Matsushita (NAIS, Aromat) Type GU GU/Limit GU-E RF/SOP RF/low RF/SOP4 HE HE/LED HE/soft HF HS PD Max mA/Ω 350/400V 120/50 120/25 120/50 50/50 40/100 70/50 50/100 80V: 50/35 250/4 150/16 150/16 250/4 300/4 180/8 120/50 650/1 350/3 200V Leak /nA 1000 1000 1000 10 10 10 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 10000 LedON Max /mA 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 5 0,5 3 Comments Only Form (Econony) Only Form Only Form Only Form A A A Only Only Only Only Only A A A A A Form Form Form Form Form A 7.2.3 Optocouplers While the PhotoMOS are used to switch currents, optocouplers are needed to pass logic signals isolated. This is needed in the measurement of the tether-current. The optocouplers in this set-up is used to pass the errorcurrent, in a closed loop measuring the emitter-current. The problem is that optocouplers need a minimum current to switch on at all. This means that a certain error-current (typically 100µA) will go undetected and thus taint the measurements. To minimize this error, an ultra-low-current optocouplers is needed. Actual amplification is only needed insofar as the error-current should be detectable at the output, without noise. It is then easy to amplify later. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 53 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat When looking at all major optocouplers suppliers, it is found that even low-current optocouplers are rarely specified below 500µA input, and often graphs show the CTR dwindling to zero at 100µA. Fortunately, the Agilent HCPL–070A (–4701/–4731/–070A/–073A depending on housing) stands out, with a specified minimum input of 40µA (min CTR 800% at 40µA, typically 3500%). Actually it has it’s peak CTR at 40µA, and graphs in the data-sheet shows it dropping by 25%-33% at 10µA, depending on temperature. This very impressive performance has been verified in the prototype. 7.2.4 Linear Optocouplers In order to close the loop, a linear optocouplers is needed. The dominant type is IL300, which is found in a host of copies from different manufacturers. Originally made by Siemens (since then changed into Infinion, which (like many others) has been bought by Vishay) it unfortunately only has a CTR from input to output (K2) of typically 0.7%. This means that if all of the measured tether current should run through it’s output, it will only be able to sustain a tether current of 0.007 times the max input current. Max recommended input current is 40mA, leading to a max tether current of 280µA. Recommended input for best linearity is even lower at 20mA, giving just 140µA. As the linearity of the IL300 is around 0.5%, this is probably advisable. It is of course anticipated that this will be remedied by having an opamp at the output, which facilitates precisely splitting the current. However, as there is no isolated supply, this is not easy to achieve in our design. The low CTR further lowers the gain of the total feedback loop, necessitating extra amplification. The prototype has used the IL300 and a transistor, with the resultant current limit, but this is not usable for the flight version. Instead, Agilent again saves the day, by making a drop-in replacement for the IL300, the HCNR201 (and 200), which features a CTR of typically 48%, minimum 36%. With a max-recommended avg. input current of 20mA, this will allow us to measure up to typically 9.6mA and Chapter 7 Component Selection page 54 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat minimum 7.2mA of tether current. This diode is further superior by having a far better linearity of typically 0.01%, max 0.07% (at –40°C – 85°C, but at low currents), which should be compared to the IL300 which has typically 0.5% (at 0°C – 75°C), and no guarantied maximum. 7.2.5 Magnetic Sensors Magnetic sensors for sensing current were long considered for the tether current. A list of suppliers was investigated, but in the end, it was found that there was no simple solution. The nearest was the Honeywell sensors, which feature an internal coil, which could be used as the input current – however they could not guarantee any high breakthrough voltage between coil and hall-sensor, and vaguely estimated it to around 100V. 7.3 I/O devices The interface between the payload electronics and the onboard computer has been fixed as an SPI bus. All information (except tether release and temperature sensing) will use this bus. 7.3.1 ADC The AD converters are needed to transmit the measured currents and voltages to the OBC. It was decided that 10bit would be sufficient, however 12 bits is implemented, to avoid problems. The device chosen is a MAX1245 low power, 8 channel, 12 bit SPI ADC. It is the only device chosen, which runs from 2.4-3.3V. All others run from 2.7-5.5V. This may be a bad design choice, but fortunately, the MAX1245 has a pin-compatible plug-in replacement, the MAX147, which could be used just as well, if wanted. The only drawback is a slightly higher current consumption, but as it is still <50µA, it’s not a concern. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 55 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 7.3.2 DAC Two analogue outputs are needed to regulate the generators. They are generated by a MAX5721 low power, 2 channel, 10bit SPI DAC. I decided that 10bit was more resolution than could be expected of the following DC/DC converters anyway. If 12bits were wanted, the MAX5722 is a 12bit drop-in compatible version. Current consumption is as usual negligible (~100µA). 7.3.3 References Both the DAC and ADC was chosen without reference, as most built-in references are not accurate enough to maintain 12bit resolution over the full temperature range of the satellite. Rather than calibrate and compensate in software, an external voltage reference is chosen: MAX6033A has <10ppm/° temperature dependency, and an initial accuracy better than 400ppm at 25°C. This means that in the range –35° to +85°C, it’s total accuracy will is better than 0,1%, or 10bit. This is excellent performance, especially for the initial accuracy. While the circuit is designed for a 3V reference (it has 200mV dropout), the ones procured are 2.5V. This has the effect changing some of the gains in the measurements. It can be restored by proper choice of resistors. While this was not planned, neither is it a real problem. The 2.5V reference can run on 2.7V supply voltage, which could be useful – however is not needed in the current specification. 7.3.4 SPI Switches In order drive the PhotoMOS switches, an analogue SPI switch is chosen. This is an overkill, as it is actually made for switching analogue currents like audio-streams and inputs to ADC’s, but it will do the job. I was unable to find any SPI controlled switches, which could drive 8 PhotoMOS, except for some significantly larger display-drivers, and of course, devices made for 15V or ±15V supplies. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 56 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Maxim actually does have an SPI “relay driver” (MAX4820) in their catalogue, but it was not marketed yet as this choice was being made (I have requested samples and a data-sheet as soon as it becomes available). 7.3.5 SPI Potentiometers To regulate the low voltage DC/DC regulators, two options were considered. One was a DC/DC regulator made for this purpose with a dedicated control input (which would be driven by a DAC). The other was a SPI controllable Potentiometer in the feedback path of a ordinary DC/DC regulator. The later would give a much larger selection of DC/DC regulators, however might give problems with capacitances of the feedback path. In the end, backorders on SPI potentiometers made the choice easy. 7.4 DC/DC regulators If the final design, two DC/DC regulators with variable controllable voltage outputs are used. In earlier design iterations, several other DC/DC regulators was investigated both for the high voltage generators, and to supply split voltages and isolated voltages for the isolated tether current measurements. The DC/DC regulators chosen are of the type MAX1820. The (forced) decision to not use a controllable potentiometer in the feedback path, made the selection of DC/DC regulators very easy. Actually, they are the only suitable ones located. They are buck step-down regulators, designed for supplying the output amplifier of a mobile phone, with a voltage, which can be regulated pending on the need for transmitted power. They have internal 1MHz clocks, MOSFET and synchronous rectifying (meaning no external Schottky diode is needed, and improving efficiency). They can supply up to 600mA average, and 0.4 – 3.4V output (up to 100% dutycycle, with dropout re. power-supply < 30mV). Chapter 7 Component Selection page 57 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The efficiency is quite high, estimated at >80% when supplying more than 2V. 7.5 Current Sense & Limit In order to protect the circuit from latchup, it is necessary to monitor the current consumption. If it becomes too high, it is a sign of a latchup, which will quickly burn the IC in question. To avoid this, a signal is sent to the power-supply, which instantly cuts power to the satellite. Power is restored after a while, when the latchup is expected to have reset. The prototype uses MAX890L, which was specified by the project. It would have been smarter to use MAX892L, which is a similar device (unfortunately not pin-compatible), designed for smaller currents. In the flight design, it would be logic to replace MAX89#L with MAX4373T, which does not have a switch buildin. The DC/DC regulators which are turned of by switching the MAX890L in the current design, should instead use the buildin shutdown feature, which would result in a more robust circuit. 7.6 Other Active While all “major” components have been covered, a few “standard” components need still be selected. Of course in the end, when they have to be chosen, they need as much attention and consideration as all the other components. They are no more “standard” than the rest, simply more easily available and have more variants available. 7.6.1 Linear Regulators The power-supply makes a 3.6V bus available, which each sub-system must regulate down to 3.3V. This is done to avoid more powerdissipation on the power-board, and to minimize electric noise on the supply between the boards. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 58 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The regulator to use has been externally decided: REG103 from Texas. 7.6.2 Op-Amps The Op-Amps needed are for inverting, filtering and boosting the measured voltages and currents. One of them will be supplying the mirrored current for the linear optocouplers, which could be up to 14.4mA. In the present design, this current is sourced by the op-amp. It is not easy to invert this to a current, which is sunk. This is because when it’s sourced, the output voltage is gnd-referenced, which is fine (assuming a good ground). If it is sunk however, it should be referenced to Vref, meaning the voltage reference would have to source this current. Actually, the present voltage reference is able to supply 15mA, but it’s not a nice design, as it introduces “big” current draws on the reference, which will influence its value, deteriorating the other measurements. The measurements are all done relative to a virtual ground of an opamp. In order to keep measurement errors well below the 10’th bit, the op-amp should have a input offset voltage well below 1/1024’th of the reference voltage. This is 2.5mV (for the 2.5V references), which is not easy for an op-amp. The op-amps used in the prototype are not good enough to meet the above demands. They do meet offset, but only at “typically” at 25°C. They are only able to source 11mA, and not at Vo=2.5V (however, this might not be that important, as the tether current is not likely to be that high). They were chosen for their extremely low power use (<1µA), in case one was needed on the isolated side of the tether current measurement. 1µA could be supplied either by a photovoltaic IC (Vishay and a few others makes those for use in “home-made” OptoMOS, i.e. to supply isolated gate current to a MOS.), or supplied by the tether current. In the last case, it was important that the op-amp did limit the minimum tether current, which could be measured, more than the offset error from the optocoupler. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 59 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The op-amps used are MAX4471 (1.8V 1µA). An even better choice for use supplied by the tether current would be the Texas Instruments OPA349NA, which has similar specs, but further allow inputs 0.2V beyond the rails, which is handy for that design. 7.6.3 Transistor While the original design has no transistors, the use of the IL300 optocoupler necessitated amplification in the feedback path. This might be a good idea on the flight-design as well. Further, a transistor is needed for each of the current-measurement devices, to detect latchup in those IC’s used to detect latchup in the rest of the circuit. The DTUsat team has made a common choice of transistor for this purpose, the 2N2222 from ON Semiconductor. This transistor is plenty good for amplification in the current measurement circuit as well, so I will us it there too. 7.7 Passives The passives of the circuit were chosen last, assuming they would not be a problem. This was not completely true. For instance acquiring a 1GΩ resistor (for testing) has proved to be difficult (fortunately a member of the DTUsat team could get them through friendly connections). 7.7.1 Power Inductors There is one power-inductor for each DC/DC regulator. They are specified by the MAX1820 datasheet as R < 200MΩ and saturation current > 1A. This may be a bit more than needed, as they will only need to supply 100mA to the high voltage generator, where the MAX1820 is rated for 600mA continuous. A host of inductors have been considered, and a very nice one from MicroSpire, the SESI-14S, was chosen. Unfortunately it could not make it in time for the prototype, so a Würth WE-PD series was used instead. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 60 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat 2 different 68uH WE-PD coils was purchased. A large size with 120MΩ and 1.5A nominel current. And a medium size with 380MΩ and 0.69A nominel current. The efficiencies have not been compared yet, although that was the intention (a SESI-14S has arrived in the mean time too). 7.7.2 Diodes The biggest problem in passives however, has been the diodes. There are blocking diodes in several places in the circuit, which should have low leakage (<1µA). This is not easy to find, in diodes rated for 200-400V, over temperature. Actually it is not possible, the best I have found is the MMBD150#A from Fairchild. They are rated at max 1nA leakage current at 125V, 25°C, but at max 3µA at 125V, 150°C. This is ofcourse an extreme temperature, and the max rating at 85°C should be < 100nA (although it is not specified). Another useful diode is the BAS45AL, from Philips. It is only rated at 125V however. 7.7.3 Resistor/Capacitor Resistors and capacitors on the prototype are laid out in 0402 footprint, except for those carrying high voltage, which have either larger footprint, or are axial threaded resistors. Most capacitors are used for decoupling, and space efficient Y5V dielectric can be used for this. However, for the op-amp filtering, and the DC/DC compensation line, X7R should be used (or C0G, but then the largest is 10nF in a 1206, 22nF in 1825, 47nF in 2220, and 100nF in 2225 package). The large capacitors for the DC/DC regulators input and output must be assured to have self-resonance above 1MHz. X7R capacitors in 0805 (up to 2.2µF at 10V) should be good. Chapter 7 Component Selection page 61 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat For RF decoupling C0G 82-100pF capacitors should be used. 200V versions are found in 0805, and 500V-1500V versions can be had in 1206 (for the tether-potential, or gate voltages). Chapter 7 Component Selection page 62 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 8 Prototype 8.1 Layout The prototype was laid out in Protel on a 100 by 100mm double sided PCB. Components were only mounted on one side, and a ground plane was used where there were no lines on the solder side (not shown). Figure 19: Layout of prototype. Chapter 8 Prototype page 63 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The high voltage part was laid out with 60mil between lines, while the rest was minimum 8mil (except for high-current parts). 60mil was chosen because that was the approximate distance between the pads on the PhotoMOS switches. Care was taken to keep the DC/DC regulators layout as close as possible, and to minimize most ground loops. 8.2 Measurements The function of the prototype board and its components has been verified, by several measurements. The OBC I/O has not been tested however, except for looking at the ADC output in an oscilloscope. 8.2.1 Switch leakage The PhotoMOS switches should have a very low leakage, in order to ensure that a gate is actually switched off, and is not being held active by the leakage current. This means leakages of less than 1µA. The used switches “features a very small off state leakage current of only 100 pA even at the rated load voltage of 400 V” according to the description in the data sheets (see the appendix). The data in the same sheet only specify “maximum 1µA”, however. This seems paradoxical, so I decided to measure it myself. The problem measuring this, is that a 1nA leakage current at 400V, corresponds to 400GΩ. To measure this resistance RS, the switch is put in series with a resistor R and supplied with a voltage V. The resistor is chosen as high as can be found (1 GΩ), to facilitate getting a signal. The voltage over the switch (VS) is then measured. Ideally, VS/V = RS/(R+RS), which reduces to RS = R*VS/(V-VS). Then the practical problems set in: Trying to measure Vs will yield 0V. Trying to measure the voltage over the resistor gives 0V too, although measuring over both the switch and the resistor yields V, the voltage supply. This is because most voltmeters have an internal resistance of 10MΩ, and will practically act as a shortcut here. Chapter 8 Prototype page 64 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The way to solve this is to use a “whetstone bridge”, in which the switch to be measured is V placed as shown in red on the diagram to the right. The voltmeter is then used across the two centre poles, and the variable resistor is turned, until the voltmeter shows zero volts. Then the impedance of the red unknown component can be simply determined, when the three other are Figure 20 known. In this way, the internal resistance of the voltmeter is no longer of consequence, as there are zero volts across it, and hence, no current will be flowing in it. The left hand side of the whetstone bridge is actually the same as in the preceding set-up mentioned, but the voltmeter measuring VS no longer measures relative to ground, but relative to a voltage that can be changed, until the reading is zero, at which point the voltage VS is mirrored on the right hand side. The beauty of this set-up is that it is insensitive to the quality of both the voltmeter, and the power supply. The whetstone bridge was a bit bothersome to implement, so I used instead a hybrid, replacing the right hand side with a variable voltage supply, which could be tweaked until the voltmeter showed zero. While this set-up is sensitive to noise on the power-supply, it is still quite insensitive to the voltmeters internal resistance. Vin The switch measured was a Vcc 220E AQV414S, and the set-up is shown to the right. Notice that it is a NC switch, so it must be activated, in order to close. This set-up was measured for two LED currents, and two input voltages (Vin): Vcc-Vled 1,878 V 1,878 V 0,821 V 0,821 V Vled 1,152 V 1,152 V 1,116 V 1,116 V Chapter 8 Prototype I LED 8,54 mA 8,54 mA 3,73 mA 3,73 mA Vin 13,40 V 30,34 V 13,06 V 31,24 V Vout 11,22 V 28,03 V 10,73 V 28,89 V V < ±4 mV < ±4 mV < ±5 mV < ±5 mV VLED AQV414S 1G VM Vout V RL=10M I leak Rleak min max 2,18 nA 5,1 G 4,2 G 6,7 G 2,31 nA 12,1 G 9,9 G 15,7 G 2,33 nA 4,6 G 3,6 G 6,3 G 2,35 nA 12,3 G 9,7 G 16,7 G page 65 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat V is the measurement to be zeroed, and the ±mV values specify the best values obtainable. The min and max values are calculated, using the uncertainties for V. Notice that the gab (from min to max) becomes quite wide, because of the very significant current running in the voltmeter, even at 5mV (5mV/10MΩ = 0.5nA), compared to the leakage current. The total effect of this is actually quite difficult to calculate. The leakage current seems largely unaffected by both the LED current, and the applied voltage, although the 30V I had available might be a bit low for this measurement. A leakage current of 2nA is on one hand very nice and low for our purpose, on the other hand it is quite high compared to the promised 100pA from the data-sheet. As long as this result is close to what we will se in orbit, the result is fine. Unfortunately, the leakage may rise sharply with temperature; but as the gate-current will be measurable in orbit with an accuracy of better than 40nA (40µA scale, 10bit), any big change in leakage will be observable. Chassis 8.2.2 Tether current measurement To verify the tether current measurement through the optical mirror, a series of measurements was performed. A negative voltage between –2V and –30V was applied to the tether, while the chassis was kept at zero volt. The negative voltage was applied through a 39kΩ resistor, which allowed measuring the current. At the same time, the output voltage from the op-amp (on the output side of the current mirror) was measured, together with the current running in it (the voltage over it’s 100Ω ballast resistor). Chapter 8 Prototype 99K1 Vcc Iout 15K42 B Vcc 22K C 100E D 38K9 A -2V to -30V is applied to the Tether here page 66 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat The total current consumption of the menagerie was recorded for reference. The tether “tip-voltage”, was called A. The tether at the satellite (after the resister) is D, so the voltage across the 38.9kΩ resistor is A-D. The op-amp output voltage is across a 15.42Ω resistor. In the first attempt, the proportionality was sadly missing. Fortunately the total current consumption of the board (which rose dramatically), alerted me to the fact that the IL300 was actually drawing a lot of LED current, although not enough to make the outputs stir much. This made me aware of the very low CTR of the IL300, which I had been ignorant of. For this reason a discrete PNP was added on the output of the HCPL73A optocoupler, sinking current from the IL300 LED, into a 100Ω ballast resistor to ground. A pull 22k pull-up was added, to ensure that the transistor did not see any leakage current from the optocoupler. The total diagram is shown left, with the main tether current path in bold. The measurement points are shown as well; notice that the tether current, the measured tether current and the LED current can be measured. A spreadsheet with the measurements is found in Appendix E on page 79, showing graphs of actual vs. measured current. The result indicated an actual CTR of the IL300 (K1) of 0.3-0.5% over the linear range. This limited the range of the measurements with linear results to 4-100µA. The K3 gain (input to output photodiode gain) was found to be 1.26 by linear regression over the results with input currents up to 80µA. The same regression gave an offset of only 1.8µA! It is quite impressive that the HCPL-073A was able to even turn on at all for an input as low as this. In all measurement in the 4-80µA input range, when correcting for K3 and offset, the observed measurement error was less than 0.12µA! When not correcting for the offset, the error is still less than 2.2µA up to 100µA input. This exceeded my expectations a lot. The linearity is Chapter 8 Prototype page 67 Richard Tøpholm K3= 1,260 measured A 2,01 µA A 7,61 µA A 12,96 µA A 18,76 µA A 33,46 µA A 47,60 µA A 62,45 µA A 76,85 µA A 88,20 µA A 93,71 µA A 103,57 µA A 112,84 µA meas.* K3 2,53 µA 9,58 µA 16,32 µA 23,63 µA 42,15 µA 59,96 µA 78,66 µA 96,80 µA 111,09 µA 118,03 µA 130,45 µA 142,13 µA Tether Electronics for DTUsat about the same as the result reported by the article in Appendix B , although they have higher We areadobted limited Yellowavalues are range. the K3 and offset for by the transistor not becalculations in other columns (written above), ing able to supply more than around 12mA, because of the chosen ballast Linear Regression Offset= 1,821 µA (on all above the line) Meas. ( * K3 + Offset ) Circuit resistor, and theError fact that theresults LED need 1.25VCorrected and two transistors (the LED K1 Using K3 K3 Offset End Pt Err Result Error Err % dissipation output NPN, and the external PNP) need around 753 µA 0,0027 1,71 µA 4,35 0.5mA µA -0,11base-emitter µA -2,56% 1,44 mA 2014 µA 0,0038 1,81 µA 1,277 1,67 µA 0,00 µA 11,40 µA -0,01 µA -0,12% 1,71 mA drop: (3.3V-1.25V-0.5V-0.5V)/100Ω = 10.5mA. Using 0,03 a lower value 3116 µA 0,0042 1,85 µA 1,273 1,69 µA -0,01 µA 18,14 µA µA 0,19% 1,93 mA 4261 µA 0,0044 1,92 µA 1,272 1,70 µA -0,01 µA 25,45 µA 0,10 µA 0,40% 2,19 mA resister would probably extend our linear range, until the IL300 burns. 7088 µA 0,0047 1,91 µA 1,266 1,75 µA -0,04 µA 43,97 µA 0,09 µA 0,21% 2,75 mA 9780 µA 0,0049 1,74 µA 1,260 1,81 µA -0,10 µA 61,78 µA -0,08 µA -0,13% 3,29 mA The0,0049 offset reported in1,260 the article is 58µA, where our design -0,03% boasts 3,83 mA 12675 µA 1,80 µA 1,82 µA -0,02 µA 80,48 µA -0,02 µA 15317 µA than 0,0050 2,18 µA 1,77 µA to 0,18 98,62optocoupler. µA 0,35 µA 0,36% 4,36 mA less 2µA. This must 1,263 be attributed the µA Agilent 17390 µA 0,0051 5,88 µA 1,287 1,23 µA 2,20 µA 112,91 µA 4,05 µA 3,59% 5,01 mA 17621 µA 0,0053 16,93 µA 1,356 -0,50 µA 8,40 µA 119,85 µA 15,11 µA 12,60% 5,88 mA When the HCNR201 1,516 is fitted, it should improve in both range and 17630 µA 0,0059 41,53 µA -5,57 µA 20,50 µA 132,27 µA 39,71 µA 30,02% 8,27 mA 17531 µA 0,0064 66,09from µA 1,707 -12,50 µA is 28,10 µA 143,95 µA 64,27 µA 44,65% 10,46 mA linearity. A graph the spreadsheet shown below. [µA] Linearity 2,0% 7 uA Error [%] when corrected for K3 and offset. Left axis. 1,5% Error [µA] when using only K3, showing the offset. Right axis. 6 uA Actual-Corrected Corrected 1,0% 5 uA 0,5% 4 uA 0,0% 3 uA -0,5% 2 uA -1,0% -1,5% 150 200 -2,0% 0,00 µA 1 uA The offset, fittet from 4-80µA 20,00 µA 40,00 µA 60,00 µA 80,00 µA 100,00 µA 0 uA 120,00 µA 8.2.3 ADC The ADC was connected to an oscilloscope, and the SPI input to it connected to the battery, giving the effect of sending continuous $FF com- Chapter 8 Prototype page 68 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat mands, which read out channel 7. The output was observed visually on the scope, and seen to represent the input voltage (a division of the supply) consistently, and without noise, even in the least significant bit. Changing the input (supply voltage), would cause smooth transitions in the binary representation. The circuit has yet to be connected to OBC, so the other channels, and the DAC have yet to be tested. Chapter 8 Prototype page 69 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Chapter 9 Conclusion An electrical design for the DTUSat tether payload has been developed, which gives maximum flexibility, while keeping the design safe and reasonably simple. In summarising, the following key points have been covered in the project: The possible emitter configurations have been found and considered. The relevant measurements have been identified Problems relating to measuring the high-voltage tether circuit has been solved Detailed design has been completed, along with component selection A prototype has been manufactured and tested Chapter 9 Conclusion page 70 Richard Tøpholm Appendix A Tether Electronics for DTUsat Thermal Considerations A simple model for the temperature of DTUsat has been produced in Excel. This was necessary to know what temperature ranges components would need to operate in. The results for a few surface finishes are shown on the following pages. The actual spreadsheet is found on the accompanying CD-ROM. Appendix A Thermal Considerations page 71 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix A Thermal Considerations page 72 Richard Tøpholm Appendix B Tether Electronics for DTUsat Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded-cathode photomultiplier tube The article by S.Argiò et al., Nucl.Instrum.Meth.A 435 (1999): 484-489, found at http://topserver.mi.infn.it/auger/documents/NIM_1999.pdf that inspired the T-S current measurement method. Appendix B Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded-cathode photomultiplier tube page 73 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix B Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded-cathode photomultiplier tube page 74 Richard Tøpholm Appendix C Tether Electronics for DTUsat Diagram On the following pages are the simple diagram and the full Protel diagram used for the layout. Appendix C Diagram page 75 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix C Diagram page 76 Richard Tøpholm Appendix D Tether Electronics for DTUsat Prototype Layout Notice that the ground plane on the solder side (blue) is not shown. Appendix D Prototype Layout page 77 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix D Prototype Layout page 78 Richard Tøpholm Appendix E Tether Electronics for DTUsat Tether current measurements on Prototype The actual spreadsheet is found on the accompanying CD-ROM. Appendix E Tether current measurements on Prototype page 79 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix E Tether current measurements on Prototype page 80 Richard Tøpholm Appendix F Tether Electronics for DTUsat Tether Parameters Gravitational constant G 66,7e-12 m³/kg/s² 10km orbitchange in 1 year (0,17uN) Geophysical constants Mass 6,0e+24 kg Radius 6,4e+06 m, mean μ = G*M 399e+12 m³/s² Sat. Mass 1,0e+0 kg Orbit height 900,0e+3 m inclination 98 ° B-felt-tvær 4,0e-6 T 0,04 gauss ----------------------------------------------------velocity 7,4e+3 m/s Orbit velocity Energy -27,4e+6 J Orbit energy ohmega 1,0e-3 rad/s angular speed period 6170,25 s 102,84 minutes Goal, Lowering orbit change -10,0e+3 m 10,0 km time 2,6e+6 s 30,0 days ----------------------------------------------------Efinal -27,4e+6 J Final orbit energy DeltaE -37,7e+3 J Change in energy P -14,6e-3 W Power needed F -2,0e-6 N Force needed Length Inclination Induced Goal 20m 20m 100m 100m 700m 700m 1500m 1500m 60° 97° 60° 97° 60° 97° 60° 97° 0,85mA 2,40mA 0,17mA 0,48mA 0,02mA 0,06mA 0,01mA 0,03mA 1,5V 0,5V 7,5V 2,7V 52V 22V 113V 40V (60°=>0,099G, 98°=>-0,041G) ang.mom. 53,8E+9 N*m*s Goal, changing declination change 17,5E-3 rad 1 grader time 31,5E+6 s 1,00 år ----------------------------------------------------DeltaL 940E+6 N*m*s torq=dL/dt 29,8E+0 N*m F 4,1E-6 N Avg. Force needed F*pi/2 6,4E-6 N Amplitude of sinusoidal force Tether Længde 700,0e+0 m 0,70 km It takes a force 3,3 times higher to Masse 60,0e-3 kg 60,00 g change the inclination 1 degee, than to resistivity 30,5e-9 Ω·m (alu) lower the orbit by 10,0 km!! (In equal time) densitet 2,7e+3 kg/m³ (alu) This is not going to happen!! tensile str 300,0e+6 Pa (al7) levetid 8,58 år ----------------------------------------------------Tape width 1,0e-3 m 1 mm Radius 100,5e-6 m 0,10 mm Crosssec 31,7e-9 m² Cross-section of tether Surface 442,1e-3 m² Surface area of tether Frontarea 140,7e-3 m² Frontal area (i.e. For aerodynamics) Resistance 672,5e+0 Ω 0,67 kΩ Strength 9,5e+0 N 0,97 kg carrying capability Vind 20,7e+0 V Induced Voltage Imax 30,8e-3 A Max current (rest-voltage= 0V) Pmax 639,1e-3 W Max power dissipated in tether (rest-voltate= 0V) Pmax/m² 1,4e+0 W/m² Max power dissipated per surface area Psun 190,0e+0 W Incident solar power Igoal 702,5e-6 A Current, goal (average) Vt,goal 472,5e-3 V Resistive voltage-drop over tether Vrest,goal 20,3e+0 V Rest voltage, Anode+Cathode+Plasma Icritical1 23,3e-3 First critical current angle,goal 88,3e+0 Tether angle to horizontal, at Igoal angle,max Unstable@Imax Tether angle to horizontal, at Imax Appendix F Tether Parameters page 81 Richard Tøpholm Tether Electronics for DTUsat Appendix F Tether Parameters page 82 Richard Tøpholm Appendix G Tether Electronics for DTUsat Selected Component Data sheets The datasheets of all used components are found in this appendix. Most considered components have datasheets on CD-ROM. Some of the used components have larger datasheet and/or application notes on the CD-ROM too. Appendix G Selected Component Data sheets page 83