I’m looking at this circuit board that has inputs from a reed switch. Everything is mounted in a panel which contains 240 VAC. The cable for the reed switch is like 6 feet in length and twisted. When I switch current through this panel, the cable I’m talking about picks up noise which I’m sure is through inductive coupling.
When I reviewed the circuit board I see two good things. One is that the input itself is isolated by an optocoupler, and the other is that the power going through the switch and optocoupler comes from an isolated supply, actually it is from the bias winding of the transformer in the switching supply, but nothing else uses it.
The bad part I see is that the supply and return basically cross over the entire circuit board. The isolated supply and voltage regulator are at one corner, the input and optocoupler for the reed switch are at the other corner.
So here is what I would like to understand better, so let’s talk about the noise.
The reed switch wires pick up differential noise in the range of +/- 5V (not too bad really, and probably fairly low because of the twisted wire). On the circuit board I assume that the differential noise creates a loop, and that the area of this loop will have a lot to do with how much of that noise is coupled into the circuit board.
Both supply and return traces are routed exactly on top of each other. The area where they are split is very small. With this in mind, am I correct to assume that the differential noise coupled into the circuit board will be minimal, despite the trace going across the whole board?
Now for the more interesting part, despite the cable being twisted, it is going to pick up common-mode noise, again through magnetic coupling (correct me if I’m wrong).
When I measured the common noise, I noticed spikes upwards of 50V!
So now I’m thinking that voltage will be applied across the board, equally on the supply and return traces. Since everything is isolated I do not imagine much of a current will flow so now I’m thinking that through capacitive coupling this is going to create noise on the whole board.
I have ideas how to fix the issue and if anybody is interested I can elaborate on those. For now I’m mostly interested in understanding how circuit boards are affected by noise and more specifically how the circuit I described will be affected. I’ve done a ton of research online and learned a lot but it seems just like with oscillator design, Murphy is hard at work when it comes to understanding noise.
If anybody is interested I can also draw up a schematic.
Thanks for any help in furthering my understanding!
When I reviewed the circuit board I see two good things. One is that the input itself is isolated by an optocoupler, and the other is that the power going through the switch and optocoupler comes from an isolated supply, actually it is from the bias winding of the transformer in the switching supply, but nothing else uses it.
The bad part I see is that the supply and return basically cross over the entire circuit board. The isolated supply and voltage regulator are at one corner, the input and optocoupler for the reed switch are at the other corner.
So here is what I would like to understand better, so let’s talk about the noise.
The reed switch wires pick up differential noise in the range of +/- 5V (not too bad really, and probably fairly low because of the twisted wire). On the circuit board I assume that the differential noise creates a loop, and that the area of this loop will have a lot to do with how much of that noise is coupled into the circuit board.
Both supply and return traces are routed exactly on top of each other. The area where they are split is very small. With this in mind, am I correct to assume that the differential noise coupled into the circuit board will be minimal, despite the trace going across the whole board?
Now for the more interesting part, despite the cable being twisted, it is going to pick up common-mode noise, again through magnetic coupling (correct me if I’m wrong).
When I measured the common noise, I noticed spikes upwards of 50V!
So now I’m thinking that voltage will be applied across the board, equally on the supply and return traces. Since everything is isolated I do not imagine much of a current will flow so now I’m thinking that through capacitive coupling this is going to create noise on the whole board.
I have ideas how to fix the issue and if anybody is interested I can elaborate on those. For now I’m mostly interested in understanding how circuit boards are affected by noise and more specifically how the circuit I described will be affected. I’ve done a ton of research online and learned a lot but it seems just like with oscillator design, Murphy is hard at work when it comes to understanding noise.
If anybody is interested I can also draw up a schematic.
Thanks for any help in furthering my understanding!