Fluke - Electrical Noise and Transients Article
Fluke - Electrical Noise and Transients Article
Fluke - Electrical Noise and Transients Article
Electrical noise is the result of more or less random electrical signals getting coupled into circuits
where they are unwanted, i.e., where they disrupt information-carrying signals. Noise occurs on
both power and signal circuits, but generally speaking, it becomes a problem when it gets on
signal circuits. Signal and data circuits are particularly vulnerable to noise because they operate
at fast speeds and with low voltage levels. The lower the signal voltage, the less the amplitude of
the noise voltage that can be tolerated. The signal-to-noise ratio describes how much noise a
circuit can tolerate before the valid information, the signal, becomes corrupted.
Noise is one of the more mysterious subjects in power quality, especially since it must be
considered with its equally mysterious twin, grounding. To lessen the mystery, there are two key
concepts to understand:
• The first is that electrical effects do not require direct connection (such as through copper
conductors) to occur.
• The second concept is that we can no longer stay in the realm of 60 Hz. One of the
benefits of 60 Hz is that it's a low enough frequency that power circuits can be treated
(almost) like dc circuits.
Coupling Mechanisms
There are four basic mechanisms of noise coupling. It pays to understand them and how they
differ one from the other because a lot of the troubleshooter's job will be to identify which
coupling effect is dominant in a particular situation.
1. Capacitive Coupling
This is often referred to as electrostatic noise and is a voltage-based effect. Lightning discharge
is just an extreme example. Any conductors separated by an insulating material (including air)
constitute a capacitor - in other words, capacitance is an inseparable part of any circuit. The
potential for capacitive coupling increases as frequency increases (capacitive reactance, which
can be thought of as the resistance to capacitive coupling, decreases with frequency, as can be
seen in the formula: XC = 1/2pfC).
2. Inductive Coupling
This is magnetic-coupled noise and is a current-based effect. Every conductor with current
flowing through it has an associated magnetic field. A changing current can induce current in
another circuit, even if that circuit is a single loop; in other words, the source circuit acts as a
transformer primary with the victim circuit being the secondary. The inductive coupling effect
increases with the following factors: (1) larger current flow, (2) faster rate of change of current,
(3) proximity of the two conductors (primary and secondary) and (4) the more the adjacent
conductor resembles a coil (round diameter as opposed to flat, or coiled as opposed to straight).
Magnetic fields are isolated by effective shielding. The material used must be capable of
conducting magnetic fields (ferrous material as opposed to copper). The reason that a dedicated
circuit (hot, neutral, ground) should be run in its own metal conduit when possible is that is in
effect magnetically shielded to minimize inductive coupling effects.
Both inductive and capacitive coupling are referred to as near field effects, since they dominate
at short distances and distance decreases their coupling effects. This helps explain one of the
mysteries of noise - how slight physical repositioning of wiring can have such major effects on
coupled noise.
3. Conducted Noise
While all coupled noise ends up as conducted noise, this term is generally used to refer to noise
coupled by a direct, galvanic (metallic) connection. Included in this category are circuits that
have shared conductors (such as shared neutrals or grounds). Conducted noise could be high
frequency, but may also be 60 Hz.
Common examples of connections that put objectionable noise currents directly onto the ground:
Signal Grounding
To understand the importance of "clean" signal grounds, let's discuss the distinction between
Differential Mode (DM) vs. Common Mode (CM) signals. Imagine a basic two-wire circuit:
supply and return. Any current that circulates or any voltage read across a load between the two
wires is called DM (the terms normal mode, transverse mode and signal mode are also used).
The DM signal is typically the desired signal (just like 120V at a receptacle). Imagine a third
conductor, typically a grounding conductor. Any current that flows now through the two original
conductors and returns on this third conductor is common to both of the original conductors. The
CM current is the noise that the genuine signal has to overcome. CM is all that extra traffic on
the highway. It could have gotten there through any of the coupling mechanisms, such as
magnetic field coupling at power line frequency or RFI at higher frequencies. The point is to
control or minimize these ground or CM currents, to make life easier for the DM currents.
Measurement
CM currents can be measured with current clamps using the zero-sequence technique. The clamp
circles the signal pair (or, in a three-phase circuit, all three-phase conductors and the neutral, if
any). If signal and return current are equal, their equal and opposite magnetic fields cancel. Any
current read must be common mode; in other words, any current read is current that is not
returning on the signal wires, but via a ground path. This technique applies to signal as well as
power conductors. For fundamental currents, a ClampMeter or DMM + clamp would suffice, but
for higher frequencies, a high bandwidth instrument like the Fluke 43 Power Quality Analyzer or
ScopeMeter should be used with a clamp accessory. Transients should be distinguished from
surges. Surges are a special case of high-energy transient which result from lightning strikes.
Voltage transients are lower energy events, typically caused by equipment switching.
They are harmful in a number of ways. Transients can be categorized by waveform. The first
category is "impulsive" transients, commonly called "spikes", because a high-frequency spike
protrudes from the waveform. The cap switching transient, on the other hand, is an "oscillatory"
transient because a ringing waveform rides on and distorts the normal waveform. It is lower
frequency, but higher energy.
Causes
Transients are unavoidable. They are created by the fast switching of relatively high currents. For
example, an inductive load like a motor will create a kickback spike when it is turned off. In fact,
removing a Wiggy (a solenoid voltage tester) from a high-energy circuit can create a spike of
thousands of volts! A capacitor, on the other hand, creates a momentary short circuit when it's
turned on. After this sudden collapse of the applied voltage, the voltage rebounds and an
oscillating wave occurs. Not all transients are the same, but as a general statement, load
switching causes transients.
In offices, the laser copier/printer is a well-recognized "bad guy" on the office branch circuit. It
requires an internal heater to kick in whenever it is used and every 30 seconds or so when it is
not used. This constant switching has two effects: the current surge or inrush can cause repetitive
voltage sags; the rapid changes in current also generate transients that can affect other loads on
the same branch.