Continue to Site

Welcome to EDAboard.com

Welcome to our site! EDAboard.com is an international Electronics Discussion Forum focused on EDA software, circuits, schematics, books, theory, papers, asic, pld, 8051, DSP, Network, RF, Analog Design, PCB, Service Manuals... and a whole lot more! To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

Measuring InRush Current for Power supplies

Status
Not open for further replies.

stanleystan

Banned
Joined
Apr 26, 2014
Messages
59
Helped
2
Reputation
4
Reaction score
2
Trophy points
8
Activity points
0
How do you measure the in rush current for power supplies?

What other circuits would you want to measure the inrush current?
 

Hi,

Current probe and scope.

Hope this helps
Klaus
 
When first powering on a circuit , measuring the AC line power current be the in-rush current? or DC power supplies output current would be the In-Rush current?

How do you measure the Transient Protection in power supplies? how would I test the Transient protection circuit in a power supply to measure sure it's working?
 
keep in mind that inrush current is pretty fast so you need a current probe with sufficient bandwidth.

transient protection needs to be measured in such a way that if the system fails to self protect, then your test method is not allowed to deliver desctructive energy.

for example, if you were measuring transient overvoltage, it would be good if you could apply a transient voltage yourself with known duration and then see if protective circuit works. if it does not work it is a good thing that you have applied a known duration transient.. the duration is obviously one that would be short enough not to cause damage. transient voltage can be created by charging inductors and then open circuit, you can charge a capactor and then close a contactor to have it appear in circuit.

in H-bridge, where shoot-through is a concern, you would command a mosfet ON for only 10us. the shoot-through protection circuit would have to self protect in less tine than that.. if it fails to protect, good thing your command signal was only 10uS!

see what i mean?
 

First you would estimate it from the ESR of all series components include diodes, Caps filters

For AC input, you can use a current transformer, Hall sensor or use a small series resistor on the Neutral wire with great care.
 

I am not sure that a current transformer would work without calibrating it first. The reason is that the voltage from it works on the Di/Dt for a 50 or 60 HZ sinewave. If you apply a step current waveform then the voltage spike it produces will be a function of the rise time as well as the current amplitude. With current inrush measurements on the mains the test has to be done many times (10?) to make sure that you are close to capturing the worst result.
Frank
 

Hi,

The reason is that the voltage from it works on the Di/Dt for a 50 or 60 HZ sinewave

A good quality current transformer will transform primary current into secondary current with the same waveform.

The only thing you have to take care is not to charge the transformer with DC current so it gets in saturation.

A sine wavefrom at the input will produce a sine waveform at the output.
A triangle wavefrom at the input will produce a triangle waveform at the output.
A square wavefrom at the input will produce a square waveform at the output.

no differentiation.

Inside the transformer there is
1) an integration: from primary current to magnetic field
2) an differentiation: from magnetic field to secondary current. (here you loose the DC current)

Klaus
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top