Thursday, 7 July 2016

Current Commutated chopper - Engineering notes

Current Commutated Chopper:


Current commutated chopper

  • Capacitor is charged to Vs, main thyristor T1 is fired at t = 0. So that load voltage Vo = Vs.
  • At t = t1, auxiliary thyristor is turned on to commutate main thyristor.
  • With turning on of TA, an oscillatory current ic is set up in the circuit.
  • At t2, Vc = - Vs and ic tends to reverse in the auxiliary thyristor TA, it gets naturally commutated.
  • As TA is reverse biased and turned off at t2. Oscillatory  current ic begins to flow through C, L, D2 and T1.
  • At t3 ic rises to io so that iT1 = 0. As a result main SCR T1 is turned off at t3. Since oscillating current through T1 turns it off it is called current commutated chopper.
  • After t3 ic supplies load current io and the excess current. iD1 = ic - Io is conducted through diode D1.
  • Afetr t4, a constant current equal to Io flows through Vs, C, L, D2 and load.
  • Capacitor c is charged linearly to source voltage Vs at t5, so during time ( t5 - t4 ) ic = Io.
  • In this commutation an opposite current pulse will be injected through SCR. As a result currents decreases and finally comes to zero if both the currents would be equal and opposite.
  • Anti parallel diode is useful to apply the reverse voltage after current through SCR becomes to zero. The value of reverse voltage is low. So 
  1. Turn off time increases.
  2. Turn off power loss increases.
  • Jones chopper employes the principle of voltage commutation.
  • Morgan's chopper based on the principle of current commutation.
Current and Voltage waveforms for current commutated chopper

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