Electronic Projects, forums and more.

Go Back   Electronic Circuits Projects Diagrams Free > Electronics Forums > Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews


Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews Are you building an electronic project or want to? Maybe you need some assistance? Come and submit your electronic questions here and let our experienced members find a solution.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 25th March 2008, 10:11 AM   (permalink)
Question Low pass filter inductor and capacitor values unknown?

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.
JAMES IRVINE is offline  
Old 25th March 2008, 02:21 PM   (permalink)
Default

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?
erosennin is offline  
Old 25th March 2008, 04:47 PM   (permalink)
Default

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
audioguru is offline  
Old 25th March 2008, 06:03 PM   (permalink)
Default

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.
crutschow is offline  
Old 27th March 2008, 04:27 PM   (permalink)
Default

so do you have any circuit diagrams for this pulse width modulated circuit
JAMES IRVINE is offline  
Old 27th March 2008, 05:30 PM   (permalink)
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JAMES IRVINE
so do you have any circuit diagrams for this pulse width modulated circuit
Afraid I don't. But Texas Instruments, among others, builds PWB (Class D) audio amplifers and you could perhaps use one of those to drive the inverter output transistors. The type you want accepts an analog input (50Hz sinewave in your case) and outputs a PWM digital signal.
crutschow is offline  
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes



Similar Threads
Title Starter Forum Replies Latest
Low pass filters & Notch Filter maidmarion General Electronics Chat 6 5th March 2008 02:39 PM
Low pass Active RC filter + PSPICE MrNobody General Electronics Chat 15 28th February 2008 01:44 AM
low pass filter sample diagram allan josephus Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews 2 25th February 2008 05:22 PM
Amplifier low pass filter richard.c Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews 2 12th February 2008 11:05 PM
Low pass audio filter steven_first_2001 Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews 5 23rd January 2005 07:36 PM



All times are GMT. The time now is 08:30 AM.


Electronic Circuits  |  Learning Electronics
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

eXTReMe Tracker