75 W Single Output, Power-Factor Corrected LED Driver Using TOP250YN
75 W Single Output, Power-Factor Corrected LED Driver Using TOP250YN
75 W Single Output, Power-Factor Corrected LED Driver Using TOP250YN
Title
Specification
Application
LED Driver
Author
Document
Number
DER-136
Date
April 1, 2008
Revision
1.6
Power Integrations
5245 Hellyer Avenue, San Jose, CA 95138 USA.
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Table of Contents
1
2
3
4
5
Introduction.................................................................................................................4
Power Supply Specification ........................................................................................5
Schematic...................................................................................................................6
PCB Layout ................................................................................................................7
Circuit Description ......................................................................................................8
5.1
Input EMI Filtering ...............................................................................................8
5.2
TOPSwitch Primary .............................................................................................8
5.3
Output Rectification .............................................................................................9
5.4
Output Feedback.................................................................................................9
5.4.1
Constant-Voltage Operation.........................................................................9
5.4.2
Constant-Current Operation .......................................................................10
5.5
Soft-Start ...........................................................................................................10
5.6
Post Filter ..........................................................................................................11
6 Bill of Materials .........................................................................................................12
7 Transformer Specification.........................................................................................14
7.1
Electrical Diagram .............................................................................................14
7.2
Electrical Specifications.....................................................................................14
7.3
Materials............................................................................................................14
7.4
Transformer Build Diagram ...............................................................................15
7.5
Transformer Construction..................................................................................16
8 Transformer Spreadsheets .......................................................................................17
9 Specifications For Common Mode Inductor L1.........................................................19
9.1
Electrical Diagram. ............................................................................................19
9.2
Inductance.........................................................................................................19
9.3
Material..............................................................................................................19
9.4
Winding Instructions. .........................................................................................19
10
Performance Data.................................................................................................21
10.1 Efficiency ...........................................................................................................21
10.2 Output Characteristic.........................................................................................22
10.3 Harmonic Content .............................................................................................23
10.4 Harmonic Content in Percentage of Fundamental.............................................23
10.5 Power Factor Vs Line Voltage at Full Load .......................................................24
11
Thermal Performance ...........................................................................................25
12
Waveforms............................................................................................................26
12.1 Drain Voltage and Current, Normal Operation...................................................26
12.2 Output Voltage Start-up Profile..........................................................................27
12.3 Drain Voltage and Current Start-up Profile ........................................................27
12.4 Output Ripple Measurements............................................................................28
12.4.1 Ripple Measurement Technique ................................................................28
12.4.2 Measurement Results ................................................................................29
13
Control Loop Analysis ...........................................................................................30
14
Surge Test ............................................................................................................32
14.1 Surge Test Results with 1.2/50s Waveform ....................................................32
14.2 Surge Test Results with 0.5s-100 kHz Ring-Waveform...................................32
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15
16
Important Note:
Although this board is designed to satisfy safety isolation requirements, the engineering
prototype has not been agency approved. Therefore, all testing should be performed
using an isolation transformer to provide the AC input to the prototype board.
Page 3 of 36
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1 Introduction
The document presents a power supply design for LED Lighting applications. The design
input voltage range is 208 to 277 VAC. The supply employs a single stage power-factor
corrected circuit to generate a 24 V, 3 A output and meets the Energy Star minimum pf
requirement of 0.9 for commercial applications with a high efficiency of 84%.
This document contains the power supply specification, schematic, bill of materials,
transformer documentation, printed circuit layout, and performance data for this design.
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Symbol
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Comment
Input
Voltage
Frequency
VIN
fLINE
208
47
277
64
VAC
Hz
2 Wire no P.E.
50/60
Output
Output Voltage 1
VOUT1
24
28
V
20 MHz Bandwidth
Output Current 1
Total Output Power
Continuous Output Power
IOUT1
3.1
POUT
A
75
Environmental
Conducted EMI
Meets EN55015B
Designed to meet IEC950, UL1950
Class II
Safety
Surge
kV
Surge
0.5
kV
Ring-wave
2.5
kV
Ambient Temperature
Page 5 of 36
TAMB
50
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3 Schematic
Figure 2 Schematic.
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4 PCB Layout
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5 Circuit Description
This design uses a discontinuous mode flyback power supply configuration, fed with
minimum capacitance at the input. Using a fixed duty-cycle over an AC line cycle allows
the peak drain current envelope, and therefore the input current, to follow the input AC
voltage waveform to give high power factor and low harmonic content. Although this
simple configuration gives both output regulation and power factor correction in a single
stage converter, it does require higher peak drain currents compared to a standard power
supply with substantiation input capacitance.
Detailed descriptions of each functional block are given below.
5.1 Input EMI Filtering
In addition to the standard filtering (X capacitors C1 and C2 and common-mode inductor
L2), L3 and L4 were added to provide increased differential-mode filtering and surge
immunity. This was required due to the small value of input capacitance (C3) and the
associated increase in switching currents seen by the AC input. Resistors R1 and R2
reduce high-frequency conducted and radiated EMI. Common-mode inductor L1 filters
very high frequency common-mode noise.
Common-mode filtering is provided by L1, L2 and Y-capacitor C9. Together with
transformer E-Shields (that reduce the source of common mode EMI currents), this
allows the design to pass EN55015 B limits with greater than 10 dB of margin.
5.2 TOPSwitch Primary
On application of the AC input, the combination of the in-rush current to charge C1, C2
and C3, together with the parasitic inductance in the AC line, causes a voltage spike that
appears across C3. In a design with a large input capacitance, this voltage rise is
negligible; however, in this case the voltage spike on C3 is sufficiently large to exceed the
BVDSS rating of the MOSFET within TOP250YN (U1). To prevent this, capacitor C4 and
diode D5 limit the maximum voltage across the DC bus while R3 is the bleeder to
discharge capacitor C4 on AC removal.
The discontinuous mode of operation needed for high power factor increases the primary
RMS current for a given output power. Selecting a larger TOPSwitch device (TOP250YN)
than needed for power delivery offsets increases in RMS current (due to DCM operation)
by reducing the RDSON related conduction losses thereby giving higher efficiency and
reduced dissipation.
As the DC input voltage across C3 falls to zero during normal operation, D6 was added in
series with the drain to prevent the DRAIN ringing below SOURCE and reverse biasing
the device. As reverse biasing of the device is not permitted, this diode must be used.
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To provide a high power factor using a single-stage flyback converter, the MOSFETs
duty cycle must be kept constant over a single AC line cycle (low bandwidth).
In the TOPSwitch-GX the operating duty cycle is a function of the control pin current. This
requires that the current into the C pin be held constant to achieve power factor
correction. The simplest way to achieve this would be to use a very large value for the
CONTROL pin capacitance (C5). However, a large value of C5 causes a large startup
time and a large startup overshoot.
To overcome this difficulty, an emitter follower (Q1) was used as an impedance
transformer with a capacitor C10 in its base. Looking into the emitter of Q1, C10 appears
to be larger (C10 x Q1hfe), and R6 appears to be smaller (R6 / Q1hfe). Capacitor C10,
together with R6, sets the dominant pole of the circuit at approximately 0.02 Hz. Resistor
R7 provides loop compensation, creating a zero at approximately 200 Hz, which gives
additional phase starting at 20 Hz to improve phase margin at gain crossover. Gain
crossover occurred in this design at approximately 35 40 Hz. Higher bandwidth is
undesirable as this degrades power factor by increasing the third harmonic content in the
input current waveform. Diode D8 prevents reverse current through Q1 during startup.
Feedback is provided from the secondary via optocoupler U2B, which in turn modulates
the base voltage of Q1 and changes the current into the CONTROL pin.
The primary clamp circuit is formed by D7, R4, R5, C6, and VR1. During normal
operation R5 and C6 set the clamping voltage. Zener VR1 sets a defined upper clamping
voltage and conducts only during startup and load transients. A fast recovery (250 ns)
blocking diode, D7, was used to recover some of the leakage energy, thereby improving
efficiency. Resistor R4 dampens high frequency ringing and improves EMI performance.
5.3 Output Rectification
To reduce power dissipation and increase efficiency, two output diodes were used (D10
and D11). These are connected to separate secondary windings to improve current
sharing between the two diodes. Filtering is provided by C11 and C12. Relatively large
values are necessary to reduce line frequency ripple present in the output due to the low
loop bandwidth required to achieve a high power factor. These values may be reduced
depending on the acceptable current ripple through the LED load.
5.4 Output Feedback
The output feedback is split into two functional blocks: constant-voltage (CV) operation
and constant-current (CC) operation.
5.4.1 Constant-Voltage Operation
Voltage feedback is provided by VR2 and optocoupler U2A. Once the output exceeds
the voltage defined by the forward drop of U2A, VR2 and R16, current flows through the
optocoupler and provides feedback to the primary. As the line and load change, the
Page 9 of 36
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magnitude of current changes to reduce or increase the MOSFET duty cycle which
maintains output regulation. Resistor R16 sets the loop gain in the constant-voltage
region.
The nominal output voltage regulation is set at 28 V, which is above the expected LED
load voltage (when operated at its rated current). Under normal operation, the supply
operates in constant-current mode, and voltage feedback is used only when the output is
unloaded.
5.4.2 Constant-Current Operation
Transistor Q3 and the forward drop of the LED in U2A are used to create a bias voltage
on the base on Q2. The additional drop across R11, R12, and R13 needed to turn on Q2
is equal to the difference between the bias voltage and the VBE of Q2 (~0.5 V). Once Q2
begins to conduct, Q4 also conducts, supplying current through U2A and providing
feedback. Resistor R9 limits the base current from Q4, and R14 sets the gain of the CC
loop. Resistor R10 keeps Q4 off until Q2 is on, while C13 provides loop compensation.
This arrangement gave an average output current in CC operation of 3.1 A.
5.5 Soft-Start
The very low loop bandwidth presents a problem at startup. Once the loop closes and
feedback is provided via U2A, it takes significant time for the loop to respond and
therefore allows significant output overshoot. This is because C10 must charge above
5.8 V before current is supplied into the CONTROL pin of U1.
The standard solution to output overshoot is to provide a soft-finish circuit. Typically this
consists of a capacitor that allows current to flow in the feedback loop before the output
has reached regulation. Here such a passive approach is not practical because of the
capacitor size required.
To overcome this, the circuit formed around transistor Q5 is used to overdrive the
feedback loop during startup. Using an element with gain (Q5) allows enough feedback
current to pre-charge C10 before the output reaches regulation.
A separate auxiliary supply is created by D12 and C15 so that the voltage across C15
rises faster than the main output across C11 and C12. While C16 charges, Q5 is on,
supplying current to charge C10 via the optocoupler, with resistor R21 limiting the
maximum current. Once the voltage across C16 reaches VO-VBE (Q5), Q5 turns off and the
circuit becomes inactive. At power down, C16 is discharged via R18, resetting the circuit
for the next power-up. The time constant of C16 and R18 appears very long; however, in
practice, C10 also takes a significant time to discharge on power down, and even
momentary AC drop outs do not result in any output overshoot.
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6 Bill of Materials
Item
Qty
2
3
1
1
Part
Ref.
C1
C2
C3
C4
Description
Mfg
B32922A2104M
Epcos
ECQ-E6224KF
EKXG451ELL150MK25S
Panasonic
Nippon Chemi-Con
C5
22 F, 16 V, Electrolytic, Gen.
Purpose, (5 x 11)
ECA-1CM220
Panasonic
C6
NCD222K1KVY5FF
C7
EKZE250ELL331MJC5S
Nippon Chemi-Con
7
8
1
1
C9
C10
440LD22-R
ECA-1CM330
Vishay
Panasonic
C11
C12
EKZE350ELL182ML25S
Nippon Chemi-Con
10
11
12
1
1
2
C13
C14
C15
C16
B37982N5103M000
SR205E104MAR
EKMG350ELL470ME11D
Epcos
AVX Corp
Nippon Chemi-Con
13
C17
EKZE350ELL151MHB5D
Nippon Chemi-Con
14
RL207
Rectron
15
16
1
1
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
1N4007-E3/54
BYV29-400
Vishay
NXP Semiconductors
17
D7
FR305-T
Diodes Inc.
18
19
1
2
1N4148
1N4003RLG
Vishay
OnSemi
20
D8
D9
D12
D10
D11
DSSK 20-015A
IXYS
21
22
1
2
F1
HS1
HS2
3721500041
Wickman
Custom
23
J1 J2
26-48-1021
Molex
24
L1
5943000201
Fair-Rite Toroid
25
26
27
28
1
2
1
3
L2
L3 L4
L5
Q1
Q2
Q3
ELF15N005A
SBC3-331-551
RFB0807-2R2L
2N3904RLRAG
Panasonic
Tokin
Coilcraft
On Semiconductor
29
Q4
Q5
2N3906
Fairchild
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30
R1
R2
CFR-25JB-5K1
Yageo
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
CFR-50JB-150K
RSF100JB-22R
RSF200JB-100K
CFR-12JB-300K
CFR-12JB-24R
CFR-12JB-22R
CFR-12JB-150R
CFR-12JB-10K
ALSR-3F-.13-1%
CFR-25JB-1R0
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Huntington Electric
Yageo
41
42
1
2
CFR-12JB-470R
CFR-12JB-1K0
Yageo
Yageo
43
CFR-12JB-200R
Yageo
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
R3
R4
R5
R6
R7
R8
R9
R10
R11
R12
R13
R14
R15
R22
R16
R20
R17
R18
R19
R21
R23
RV1
T1
U1
CFR-12JB-1K6
CFR-12JB-100K
CFR-12JB-10R
CFR-12JB-300R
MFR-25FBF-10K2
V320LA10
BEER-28-111-CP
TOP250YN
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Yageo
Littlefuse
TDK
Power Integrations
52
U2
LTV-817A
Liteon
53
VR1
P6KE200ARLG
OnSemi
54
VR2
1N5254B
Microsemi
Page 13 of 36
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7 Transformer Specification
7.1
Electrical Diagram
WD4 WD6
Shield Shield
WD1
Core Cancellation
1
2nd
WD7
half Primary
10
WD5
Secondary
3
WD2
1st half Primary
2
4
WD3
Bias
5
Figure 4 Transformer Electrical Diagram.
7.2
Electrical Specifications
Electrical Strength
Primary Inductance
Resonant Frequency
Primary Leakage Inductance
7.3
3000 VAC
171 H, -0/+10%
1290 kHz (Min.)
3 H (Max.)
Materials
Item
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
Description
Core: EER28 PC40 or equivalent gapped for 248 nH/T2
Bobbin: Vertical EER28 10 pins, safety rated
Magnet Wire: 26AWG
Magnet Wire: 25AWG
Magnet Wire: 28AWG
Copper foil: 14 mm wide
Triple Insulated Wire: 28AWG
Tape: 14.7 mm
Tape: 16.7mm
Varnish
2 mm Polyester web tape
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7.4
WD7:
1
3
WD6: 1
1T Copper Foil
6
7
8
WD5: 10
WD4:
WD3:
WD2:
6T x 4 _ #28 TIW
1T Copper Foil
(reversed winding)
1
4
3T x 4 _ #28 AWG
5
3
(scattered)
9T x 3 _ #26 AWG
WD1: 1
Starting Lead
Connected to Pin 1
Finish Lead
Connected to Pin 1
Page 15 of 36
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Transformer Construction
Bobbin Preparation
WD1 Core Cancellation
Tape
WD2 First Half Primary
Tape
WD3 Bias
Tape
WD4 Shield
Tape
WD5 Secondary
Tape
WD6 Shield
Tape
WD7 Second Half
Primary
Tape
Final Assembly
Place bobbin, item [2], on the winding machine with pins side oriented to the left
hand side. Use 2 mm Polyester web tape [11] on left hand side to meet safety
creepage distances.
Start at pin 1, wind from left to right 9 trifilar turns of item [3] in a uniform, tightly
wound layer. Cut finish lead at the end of the winding.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Start at pin 2, wind from left to right 13 bifilar turns of item [4] in a uniform,
tightly wound layer. Finish at pin 3.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Start at pin 5, wind 3 quad-filar turns of item [5] from left to right in a single
scattered layer. Finish at pin 4.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Prepare copper tape, item [6], as shown in figure 6. Connect starting lead to
pin 1. Wind 1 turn in reverse winding direction. The finish lead is left
unconnected.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Start at pins 10 and 8, Wind from left to right 6 turns of 4 wires in parallel, item
[7], in a uniform layer. Finish on pins 7 and 6.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Prepare copper tape, item [6], as shown in figure 7. Starting lead is left
unconnected. Wind 1 turn and connect finish lead to pin 1.
Use 1 layer of tape, item [8], to hold the winding.
Start at pin 3, wind from left to right 13 bifilar turns of item [4] in a uniform,
tightly wound layer. Finish at pin 1.
Use 3 layers item, [9] as insulation.
Assemble and secure core halves with bobbin. Varnish impregnate item [10].
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8 Transformer Spreadsheets
The standard flyback transformer design approach was modified due to the minimal input
capacitance for high power-factor (PF). A very high capacitance value was entered for
CIN so the design uses the transformer at the peak of the AC line voltage (at low line).
The output power entered was increased from the 75 W specified to 119 W. This was to
compensate for the under-delivery of output power when the AC input voltage waveform
is low.
ACDC_TOPSwitchGX_ INPUT
043007; Rev.2.15;
Copyright Power
Integrations 2007
ENTER APPLICATION VARIABLES
VACMIN
208
INFO
OUTPUT
UNIT
TOP_GX_FX_043007: TOPSwitch-GX/FX
Continuous/Discontinuous Flyback Transformer
Design Spreadsheet
Volts
VACMAX
277
Volts
fL
50
Hertz
AC Mains Frequency
VO
26.00
Volts
PO
119.00
Watts
Output Power
0.78
0.50
VB
12
tC
3.00
CIN
Efficiency Estimate
Loss Allocation Factor
Volts
99999.00
TOP250
Power Out
uFarads
Universal
115 Doubled/230V
210W
290W
3.969
Amps
4.851
Amps
0.70
ILIMITMIN
ILIMITMAX
Frequency (F)=132kHz,
(H)=66kHz
fS
Bias Voltage
132000
Hertz
fSmin
124000
Hertz
fSmax
140000
Hertz
VOR
116.00
Volts
VDS
10.00
Volts
VD
0.50
Volts
VDB
0.70
Volts
KP
1.00
Page 17 of 36
EER28
P/N:
PC40EER28-Z
EER28_BO
BBIN
P/N:
BEER-28-1112CPH
cm^2
0.821
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LE
6.4
cm
AL
2870
nH/T^2
BW
16.7
mm
mm
1.50
2.00
NS
294
Volts
VMAX
392
Volts
0.29
IAVG
0.52
Amps
IP
3.58
Amps
IR
3.58
Amps
IRMS
1.11
Amps
uHenries
26
Primary Inductance
Primary Winding Number of Turns
ALG
248
nH/T^2
BM
2838
Gauss
BP
3848
Gauss
BAC
1419
Gauss
ur
1780
LG
0.38
mm
BWE
27.4
mm
OD
1.04
mm
INS
0.08
mm
DIA
0.96
mm
19
AWG
AWG
CM
1290
CMA
1160
Cmils
Cmils/Amp !!! DECREASE CMA (200 < CMA < 500) Decrease
L(primary layers),increase NS,smaller Core
15.66
Amps
ISRMS
7.62
Amps
IO
4.58
Amps
IRIPPLE
6.09
Amps
CMS
1524
Cmils
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AWGS
18
AWG
DIAS
1.03
mm
ODS
2.28
mm
INSS
0.63
mm
655
Volts
PIVS
115
Volts
PIVB
55
Volts
4
1
Electrical Diagram
9.1
9.2
Inductance
Inductance
9.3
42 uH
Material
Item
1
2
3
Description
Fair-Rite Toroid 5943000201
Magnetic wire 26AWG
Triple Insulated wire 26AWG
Page 19 of 36
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10 Performance Data
All measurements performed at room temperature, 60 Hz input frequency.
10.1 Efficiency
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
200
210
220
230
240
250
260
270
Page 21 of 36
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280
1-Apr-2008
25
20
277 VAC
15
208 VAC
Lower Current Limit
10
0
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
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300
250
200
150
100
50
0
1
10
Harmonic
Figure 12 Input Current Harmonic Content. Full Load, VIN = 230 VAC.
Iin(mA) At
230VAC
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
385
2.4
15.6
2.3
10.5
1
8.6
0.5
6.5
0.4
% of
Maximum % Allowed By IEC
Fundamental
61000-3-2. Class C
0.62
4.05
0.60
2.73
0.26
2.23
0.13
1.69
0.10
2.0
29.7
10.0
7.0
5.0
Table 2: Harmonic Content in Percentage of Fundamental and IEC 61000-3-2 Limits for C Class
Equipment.
NOTE: Third Harmonic Spec Follows the Formula: 30* PFC. (Power Factor at 230 VAC).
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1.00
Power Factor
0.99
0.98
0.97
0.96
0.95
200
220
240
260
280
POWER FACTOR
0.992
0.992
0.990
0.988
0.982
0.978
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11 Thermal Performance
Two sets of data were taken on the UUT. One set was taken with the unit inside a closed
cardboard box at room temperature. The second set of data was taken with the UUT in a
metal box encapsulated with thermal-conductive Epoxy. Results are shown below.
Temperature (C)
UUT Open Frame
Item
Ambient
TOPSwitch (U1)
Transformer (T1)
Output Rectifiers (D10,
D11)
UUT Encapsulated
with thermal epoxy
in a metal case.
208 VAC 277 VAC
25
25
63
59
66
63
62
57
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12 Waveforms
All waveforms are shown with LEDs used as load.
12.1 Drain Voltage and Current, Normal Operation
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Probe Ground
Probe Tip
Figure 21 Oscilloscope Probe Prepared for Ripple Measurement. (End Cap and Ground Lead
Removed).
Figure 22 Oscilloscope Probe with Probe Master (www.probemaster.com) 4987A BNC Adapter.
(Modified with wires for ripple measurement, and two parallel decoupling capacitors added).
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Figure 26 Bode Plot Measured at 208 VAC and Full Load. Crossover Occurs at Approximately 38 Hz
With a Phase Margin of Approximately 50 Degrees.
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Figure 27 Bode Plot Measured at 277 VAC and Full Load. Crossover Occurs at Approximately 40 Hz
With a Phase Margin of Approximately 45 Degrees.
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14 Surge Test
14.1 Surge Test Results with 1.2/50 s Waveform
Surge
Level (V)
+500
-500
+1000
-1000
Input
Voltage
(VAC)
230
230
230
230
Injection
Location
Injection
Phase ()
Number Of
Surges
Test Result
(Pass/Fail)
L to N
L to N
L and N to G
L and N to G
90
90
90
90
10
10
10
10
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Input
Voltage
(VAC)
230
230
230
230
Injection
Location
Injection
Phase ()
Number Of
Surges
Test Result
(Pass/Fail)
L to N
L to N
L and N to G
L and N to G
90
90
90
90
10
10
10
10
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
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15 Conducted EMI
Figure 28 Conducted EMI, 230 VAC Full Load, UUT Placed on a Grounded Metal Plate.
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16 Revision History
Date
01-Apr-08
Author
KM
Revision
1.6
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Reviewed
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