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The input is 350mA RMS and is loaded with a 10 ohms resistor. The resistor is used as a "burden" which is the resistor used in a current meter and the circuit in this thread detects and measures the voltage across this resistor then calculates the current.The OP mentions up to 350 mA. Can anyone describe what componentes that curren flows through? At lost here.
That is because they are most likely using screenshots as opposed to printing out a schematic. And they have sloppy technique when making the schematic.Every single Multisim schematic posted on all electronics forums shows the lines wandering all over the place and there are chicken pox dots all over it.
Try this instead. Click on Filter WizThe link to the Analog Devices filter wizard does not work.
Why don't you post one?Why not use a modern multi-order switched capacitor Butterworth lowpass filter instead of capacitors, resistors and opamps. It makes an excellent filter.
I am not getting a smooth dc after doing this...Can you suggest resistor value?470μF will take all day to charge. Use a much lower value like this:
As I showed in post #24!I am not getting a smooth dc after doing this...Can you suggest resistor value?
You need to use the circuit Mike showed in post #30.I am not getting a smooth dc after doing this...Can you suggest resistor value?
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If you want to muck around with different circuits, have at it, but don't bother us if they don't work.![]()
Thanks a lot Sir...This circuit is perfect.It has fulfilled my requirementSo here is my final attempt. The Input I(Rb) is a 50Hz sinusoidal current burst (15 pulses) that starts at 100ms and ends at 400ms. The simultion is repeated with the amplitude of I1 stepping from +-50mA to+-350mA in steps of 50mA.
The current is converted to a voltage by the burden resistor Rb. U1 and U2 are a full-wave rectifier that creates the full-wave rectified signal at V(fw). The average value this signal is proportional to the input current, but has its first ripple component at 100Hz.
We need a filter U3 U4 that smooths V(fw) to get rid of the 100Hz ripple, but settles within 100ms. It takes a 4th Order Bessel LPF to do that.
You need Rail-to-Rail IN/OUT 1MHz 3.3V opamps to pull this off.
I would like to see you repeat this simulation in Multisim, including the filter rise-fall response. I think that LTSpice is far superior to Multisim in setting up a complex analysis like this. Note how easy it is to start-stop the sinusoidal current, and to repeat the sim at multiple amplitudes. For the students of LTSpice, I am including the .asc file so you can run this sim.
View attachment 104764
I thought I already did......
Can you explain the circuit in detail?
which opamp have you used?I thought I already did...