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| I am doing a power electronics project for my HND second year Graded unit. I have chosen the DC to AC Inverter to build. I have come across one or two circuit diagrams which are not too complex and may be able to work. My project is for a true sine wave inverter but the circuits I have in mind to use have a square wave output. I was hoping someone would be able to let me know for a 50 Hz frequency which value of Inductor and Capacitor would I need to filter out the unwanted harmonics with the low pass filter arrangment. A series inductor followed by a capacitor in parallel. Any Ideas on any aspect of this project I have would be really appreciated especially if I could receive help on understanding what the circuit I will finally use actually does component by component if at all possible. | |
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| See this attachment on this forum, it was from a thread about getting a sine from a 555 and it progressed slightly... If you have simulation software, try changing the values of R1=R2 and C1=C3, make sure they're the same, and see which values get you 50Hz... I'm sure there is a more legitimate way of doing this...
__________________ What is a joule per second? | |
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| A square-wave inverter has a peak output voltage the same as the RMS voltage of a sine-wave so the power in a heater and in an incandescent light is the same. If you could somehow filter out the harmonics then the voltage will be too low. An inductor and a capacitor to filter out harmonics above 50Hz will be huge and expensive. The inductor will have such a high resistance that hardly any current will flow. Modern sine-wave inverters stepup the battery voltage with a small high frequency circuit and small transformer then use a high frequency pulse-width-modulation IC to make a switched waveform with many steps in it. Then a small LC filter removes the high frequency which smooths the steps into a sine-wave.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| The design you use depends upon the efficiency and sine wave distortion you can tolerate. A modified square wave technique used on some inexpensive converters produces square waves with some dead spots between positive and negative half-cycles to more closely approximate a sine-wave which can be more easily filtered. The best technique uses a pulse-width-moduated circuit to generate a series of square-waves whose average value is the desired sine-wave. This can be smoothed with a small amount of filtering to remove the square-waves. This is similar to a PMW Class-D (switching) audio IC circuit such as built by TI among others. | |
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| so do you have any circuit diagrams for this pulse width modulated circuit | |
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