Absence of voltage detector
11162983 · 2021-11-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R15/144
PHYSICS
G01R15/14
PHYSICS
International classification
G01R19/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
An absence of voltage indicator has an isolation circuit, an FM modulator attached to the isolation circuit, a reference oscillator, and a mixer attached to the reference oscillator and the FM modulator, wherein the output of the mixer is the difference of the two signals. In one embodiment, the FM modulator includes a variable capacitor which varies in response to a voltage in parallel to a fixed capacitor and an inductor in parallel to the capacitors.
Claims
1. An absence of voltage detector comprising: an isolation circuit connected to a powerline; an FM modulator connected to the isolation circuit wherein the FM modulator varies relative to the a voltage; a reference oscillator; and a mixer connected to the FM modulator and the reference oscillator wherein the output of the mixer is the difference of the signals wherein the isolation circuit comprises a first high value resistor, a TVS diode connected to the first high value resistor, and a second high value resistor connected to the TVS diode.
2. The absence of voltage detector of claim 1 wherein the FM modulator comprises a variable capacitor configured to vary in relation to the line voltage, a fixed capacitor in parallel to the variable capacitor, and an inductor in parallel to the fixed capacitor and the variable capacitor.
3. The absence of voltage detector of claim 2 wherein the variable capacitor comprises a varactor.
4. The absence of voltage detector of claim 1 further comprising an envelope detector connected to the output of the mixer.
5. The absence of voltage detector of claim 4 further comprising a frequency to voltage convertor.
6. The absence of voltage indicator of claim 5 further comprising a threshold windows detector.
7. The absence of voltage indicator of claim 1 further comprising a capacitor connected to the second high value resistor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The Detection Method
(16) The method utilizes an RF signal in which the frequency will vary depending upon the input voltage (FM modulated). To make the decision as to whether the line voltage exceeds the threshold value for presenting harmful voltage, the modulated signal is converted back to voltage level which is compared to a preset threshold value. The line voltage above this threshold of interest can be disregarded and the circuit is optimized around the threshold value. This is illustrated in the system overview of the absence of voltage indicator 10 in
(17) At first glance, converting the voltage level to RF signal, then converting it back to voltage level appears redundant. However, as we progress through describing the concept it becomes clear that this method provides benefits and advantages in isolation, simplification of the system and satisfying the requirements of a system with high level of failsafe structure.
The FM Modulator
(18) As shown in
Isolation Techniques
(19) To prevent damage of the detection circuitry caused by high voltage surges. ESD or transients on line voltage, an isolation circuit 40 is used as shown in
Demodulator—Reference Oscillator
(20) As shown in
Demodulator—Mixer and Envelop Detector
(21) Demodulation is realized by mixing the reference oscillator 200 signal and the FM modulator circuit 100. An envelope detector 400 is used to produce the difference of these input signals which is then converted to a square wave signal.
(22) As shown in
Combining the Potential of Presence of Voltage in all, Line to Line and Line to Ground Arrangement
(23) To establish an absence of voltage scenario, every combination of 3 phase line to line and line to ground combinations are tested. As illustrated in
(24) The circuit detects DC as well as AC 50/60 Hz line-voltage. To be assured that a voltage over the threshold is detected, oversampling of the line-voltage over period of 60 Hz is required. As shown in in
The Detection System
(25) As shown in in
(26) The last stage in the detection channel is suspension of the safe state, or postponement of a safe-state indication, to establish that no threshold exit of line-voltage has occurred in last several periods of AC line voltage.
(27)
Preventing False-Safe Indication do to Circuit/Component Failure/Drift
(28) As shown in
(29) Any drift in component that results in a drift of FM modulator to a lower frequency range or the Reference Oscillator to higher frequency range will result in lower frequency at 0 Volt line-voltage scenario and will push the voltage level to unsafe area at the Threshold Window detector circuit. This also results in a fail-safe scenario. This is illustrated in
(30) Any drift in component that results in a drift of FM modulator to a higher frequency range or Reference Oscillator to lower frequency range will result in lower frequency at around 3 Volt line-voltage scenarios and will push the voltage level to unsafe area at the Threshold Window detector circuit before it reaches 3 Volt. This will also result in a fail-safe scenario. This is illustrated in
Validation of Tester's Functionality Utilizing Diagnostic Circuit
(31) To establish a high level of confidence in the detection system, after an absence of voltage detection and before a safe state indication the detection circuit's functionality needs to be confirmed. This is called ‘test the tester’ and it is a part of the diagnostic system. As is illustrated by
Validation of the Voltage Detector's Connectivity to the Power Line and Ground Utilizing Diagnostic Circuit
(32) As a part of the diagnostic, connectivity of the tester to the line voltage and ground is verified. This is realized by technique illustrated in
(33) Any change in the overall resistance value will be exposed by change of the decay time. The power line is terminated to the ground thru a high value resistor and absence of the resistor path/connection will change the decay time. This is illustrated in
(34) While particular embodiments and applications of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein and that various modifications, changes, and variations may be apparent from the foregoing without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as described.