A
Arlet
Hello,
I need to regulate a 220V resistive heater with a Solid State Relay.
The heater power is a few kW. The SSR is of a type that only switches
on or off during zero crossings (which is fine, because I want to
minimize interference).
I'm switching the SSR with a microcontroller. I have an opto coupler
attached to the mains, so the microcontroller can detect the phase and
frequency, and control the SSR in sync with the mains.
My goal is to control the heater output as smoothly as possible. I want
to do this by switching by half-period intervals, but I am wondering
which switching patterns are considered acceptable for (power company)
transformers.
For instance, a 50% duty cycle can be created by this waveform:
_ _ _
/ \ ______/ \ ______/ \
\_/ \_/ \_/
But also by this one:
_ _ _
___/ \___/ \___/ \___
However, the second pattern, which only uses positive half periods,
results in a DC current, and I understand this can cause losses in the
transformer.
Now, I'm wondering about this pattern, for a 75% duty cycle:
_ _ _
___ / \___/ \ / \
\_/ \_/ \_/
Would that be acceptable ? I assume so, since there's no DC component.
Or this one for a 25% duty-cycle, which has a DC component, but it's
relatively small:
_ _
___/ \_________/ \______
Basically, I'm looking a simple guideline as to which patterns are
considered acceptable, and still get the most switching flexibility. Or
do I need to worry at all ?
I need to regulate a 220V resistive heater with a Solid State Relay.
The heater power is a few kW. The SSR is of a type that only switches
on or off during zero crossings (which is fine, because I want to
minimize interference).
I'm switching the SSR with a microcontroller. I have an opto coupler
attached to the mains, so the microcontroller can detect the phase and
frequency, and control the SSR in sync with the mains.
My goal is to control the heater output as smoothly as possible. I want
to do this by switching by half-period intervals, but I am wondering
which switching patterns are considered acceptable for (power company)
transformers.
For instance, a 50% duty cycle can be created by this waveform:
_ _ _
/ \ ______/ \ ______/ \
\_/ \_/ \_/
But also by this one:
_ _ _
___/ \___/ \___/ \___
However, the second pattern, which only uses positive half periods,
results in a DC current, and I understand this can cause losses in the
transformer.
Now, I'm wondering about this pattern, for a 75% duty cycle:
_ _ _
___ / \___/ \ / \
\_/ \_/ \_/
Would that be acceptable ? I assume so, since there's no DC component.
Or this one for a 25% duty-cycle, which has a DC component, but it's
relatively small:
_ _
___/ \_________/ \______
Basically, I'm looking a simple guideline as to which patterns are
considered acceptable, and still get the most switching flexibility. Or
do I need to worry at all ?