* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Power & Heat
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Engineering 6806 Engineering 6806: Design Project Power and Heat Michael Bruce-Lockhart 9/10/02 Modeling Heat Flow Engineering 6806: Design Project • • • • • • Use resistive equations Power = Heat = Current Temperature = Voltage Heater is a current source Fixed temperature is voltage source Insulation is a resistance 9/10/02 Power & Heat 2 Heating a Building Engineering 6806: Design Project Inside temperature Heat flow through walls Outside temperature Tin = Tout + P x R P = (Tin – Tout) / R Tin Tout R Power dissipated in heaters = Heat generated by heaters 9/10/02 P Power & Heat 3 Piercing the Wall Engineering 6806: Design Project Rgap Rdoor Rwin Tin Tout Rwall • Piercing creates parallel heat paths • Lowers resistance • More power to maintain Tin • Calculable: R = RSI/A P 9/10/02 Power & Heat 4 Heat in Semiconductors Engineering 6806: Design Project θ conventionally used instead of R Thermal resistance junction-to-case Junction temperature Tj P Thermal resistance case-to-air Ambient temperature jc Tc ca Tamb Case temperature Average power Dissipated In semiconductor 9/10/02 Power & Heat 5 Temperatures Engineering 6806: Design Project • Thus the case temperature is Tc = Ta + θca x Pav • Notice it fluctuates up with ambient temp • Junction temperature Tj = Tc + θjc x Pav = Ta + (θjc +θca) x Pav • If Tj > 155 °C, junction melts! 9/10/02 Power & Heat 6 Adding a Heatsink Engineering 6806: Design Project Thermal resistance rating Thermal gunk used to attach heatsink to case jc Tj Tc ch of heatsink hs Tamb P If θch + θhs << θjc Then Tc ≈ Tamb & Tj ≈ θjc x Pav Best you can do! 9/10/02 Power & Heat 7 Supply Bypassing Engineering 6806: Design Project • The supply pins on the H-Bridge must be bypassed • Large inductive loads • V = L di/dt • Cutoff the current => high voltages • Need bypass caps to handle recirculating currents • 100 µF for every amp of current 9/10/02 Power & Heat 8 Power Calculations Engineering 6806: Design Project Overheating is caused by power dissipation. A switching element dissipates power when it’s off, when it’s on and when it’s switching PD Poff Pon Ps The off power is the peak voltage times the leakage current (which should be very small) times the proportion of the time the switch is off– Poff V pk I off ( 1 D) where D is the duty cycle. The on power is the switched current (which we’ll call the peak current although it may vary depending upon what the motor is doing) times the switch drop times the proportion of the time it is on– Pon I pkVon D 9/10/02 Power & Heat 9 Switching Power Engineering 6806: Design Project The switching power takes a little more work. Suppose the voltage goes linearly from 0 to Vpk in ts seconds while the current starts from Ipk and drops linearly to 0 in the same time. Then the instantaneous power dissipated in the switching device is Vpk Ipk Psi (t ) V pk t / t s I pk (1 t / t s ) V pk I pk / t s (t t 2 / t s ) ts By integrating this over the switching time we can calculate the energy dissipated ts t E V pk I pk / t s (t t 2 / t s )dt V pk I pk / t s (t s2 / 2 t s2 / 3) V pk I pk s 6 0 9/10/02 Power & Heat 10 Shape Factor Engineering 6806: Design Project Assuming the positive and negative going switching is symmetric, this occurs twice per switching cycle, so that the average power over one cycle is ts 1 Ps V pk I pk V pk I pk (t r t f ) f 3T 6 The 1/6 represents a shape factor–that is it depends upon the exact shape of the currents and voltages during the rise and fall times. The details may differ (the waveforms might be more exponential, for example, and the rise and fall shapes might differ) but the only difference to the analysis is in the exact value of the shape factor. Thus the total power dissipated in the switching element is General shape factor PD V pk I off (1 D) I pkVon D V pk I pk k sht s f I pkVon D V pk I pk k sht s f Ioff small 9/10/02 Power & Heat 11