I have been working on Offline Inverter for EL panels (electroluminescent panels). EL panels are driven by 75 Volt AC and 1Khtz frequency. Main blocks of the design are
1. Mains AC (220 VAC 50Hz) to 150 Volt DC ( Flyback switch mode with secondary feedback)
2. 150 Volt DC to 75 V AC ( half bridge inverter switching two mosfets with help of PIC)
A simple square wave is enough for EL panels, hence simple on/off of the switches is done at 1 KHZ and 50% duty cylce.
Now I am stuck-up with the output section of the Inverter - LC filter.
My questions are what are the considerations and calculations be done for deciding the values of L and C?
What are the functions of L? does it is used to only filter the harmonics or does it store the energy also?
My carrier frequency and out put frequency are same, how should I calculate the values of L and C?
I am a novice so please bear with me for any stupidity from my side.
Many Thanks
Thanks for the help, but I seen all the commercially available EL inverters with Toroidal Inductor in the out put section. The one I have has Inductor with 17 mH (toroidal with 330 turns on Sendust/Koolmu core ID-14mm, OD-30mm, Ht-11mm, inductance of core per turn2 is 157).
Does it used for energy storage or giving sinewave shape to output? or both?
If yes than, what are its design considerations?
Thanks for the help, but I seen all the commercially available EL inverters with Toroidal Inductor in the out put section. The one I have has Inductor with 17 mH (toroidal with 330 turns on Sendust/Koolmu core ID-14mm, OD-30mm, Ht-11mm, inductance of core per turn2 is 157).
Does it used for energy storage or giving sinewave shape to output? or both?
If yes than, what are its design considerations?
Adding a coil and capacitor can bring on resonating action. It can obtain sine waves from square waves.
The new amplitude can also be several times the supply V.
I made a broad assumption as to the arrangement of components. I started with a 17mH coil, then adjusted the capacitor value so as to boost the output V several times. Increasing the Farad value increases the output V, but it also draws more current from the supply. Only a few mA go through the load, hence its efficiency is low.
I don't know whether this is done in commercially manufactured units, but it certainly looks to be a handy technique. That is, if an EL display can be driven by sine waves.
The straightforward technique is to put a DC blocking capacitor in series. That's the reason I arranged things as in post #4.
However if the manufacturer did it differently, there is probably a reason.
I don't know the specific way to drive EL panels, but if they are like an LCD display, they cannot tolerate a DC component in their driving AC waveform.