A
Adam S.
I'm building a 100W half bridge power supply, and is my my first time of
off line switching supply. To get some ideas on practical design, I've
being looking at PC supplies because they use push pull topology. My
question is why do these supplies have a 1 to 2 uF capacitor in series with
the primary winding. I figured its for flux balancing of the transformer,
however shouldn't the two main input electrolytics correct for transformer
flux imbalance since the center voltage of the two main capacitors can
shift up or down, thus nulling DC primary winding current ?
The rectified mains voltage is typically applied across 2 x 200V capacitors
in series, so that's 265V*1.4142 = 360V, or 360/2 = 180V per capacitor.
That the center voltage is allowed to deviate up to +-20V.
off line switching supply. To get some ideas on practical design, I've
being looking at PC supplies because they use push pull topology. My
question is why do these supplies have a 1 to 2 uF capacitor in series with
the primary winding. I figured its for flux balancing of the transformer,
however shouldn't the two main input electrolytics correct for transformer
flux imbalance since the center voltage of the two main capacitors can
shift up or down, thus nulling DC primary winding current ?
The rectified mains voltage is typically applied across 2 x 200V capacitors
in series, so that's 265V*1.4142 = 360V, or 360/2 = 180V per capacitor.
That the center voltage is allowed to deviate up to +-20V.