EMI FILTER WITH IMPROVED SAFETY
20230231531 · 2023-07-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03H1/00
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/44
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/322
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A safety device for an automotive EMI filter that is connected in series with a filtering capacitor. The safety device has normally a low impedance and does not alter the functioning of the filter, but it is configured to present an increased inductance in the event of a discharge. The device reduces the discharge current that can be accidentally conducted through a human body.
Claims
1. An automotive EMI filter that attenuates noise in an attenuation band, the filter including at least one combination of a capacitor and a safety device, wherein the safety device is configured to present a first impedance during normal operation of the filter and a second impedance higher than the first impedance when the capacitor is being discharged, characterized in that the safety device attenuates and slows down the discharge current (I.sub.f) of the capacitor.
2. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the safety device is configured to exhibit the first impedance for signals with frequency in the attenuation band of the filter and the second impedance for signals having frequencies below the attenuation band.
3. The automotive EMI filter of claim 2, wherein at a cut-off frequency of the EMI filter the first impedance is, in absolute value, at least ten times smaller than the impedance of the capacitor.
4. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the second impedance has a resistive component of at least 100 Ohm, preferably at least 500 Ohm, more preferably at least 1000 Ohm.
5. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the capacitor and the safety device are combined in series.
6. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the safety device is an active electronic device.
7. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the second impedance is infinite.
8. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the safety device exhibits nonlinear behaviour when the capacitor is being discharged.
9. The automotive EMI filter of claim 8 including a control unit (3201-d) configured to sense a feature of the current flowing through the capacitor, or of the voltage across the capacitor, or any other suitable electric signal indicating a discharge condition and to control an actuator that gives rise to the second impedance during a discharge.
10. The automotive EMI filter of claim 9 wherein the actuator is a variable resistor or a switch or a controlled source.
11. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, the capacitor and the safety device being connected in series between two conductors with a nominal potential difference of at least 400 VDC.
12. The automotive EMI filter of claim 1, wherein the capacitor stores an energy higher than 0.2 J when it is charged at the nominal potential difference.
13. A method of improving the safety of an electric vehicle comprising detecting an electric signal that indicates or suggests that a capacitor is discharging itself through a human body and raising an impedance of a safety device connected in series with the capacitor, whereby the safety device attenuates and slows down the discharge current.
14. A method of upgrading and/or retrofitting existing filter products, comprising adding a safety device in series with a capacitor, wherein the safety device is configured to present a first impedance during the normal operation of the filter and a second impedance higher than the first impedance when the capacitor is being discharged accidentally through a human body, whereby the safety device attenuates and slows down the discharge current.
Description
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] Exemplar embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the description and illustrated by the drawings in which:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
EXAMPLES OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
[0024]
[0025] The configuration of
[0026]
[0027]
[0028] According to the needs, an EMC filter can be designed to attenuate differential and/or common mode noise. Common mode noise appears simultaneously with the same polarity on all the conductors of the supply bus and is often dominant. The filter of
[0029]
[0030] A measure of safety is provided, conventionally, by the switches S1, S2 and the bleeding resistors R1, R2. The switches S1, S2 automatically break the connection between the bus conductors 91, 92 and the batteries in case of collision and, lacking the connection with the batteries, the bleeding resistors R1, R2 discharge the capacitors C1, C3. This discharge needs however several seconds such that a person touching the live conductor 91 and the chassis of the vehicle could receive a dangerous shock from the capacitor C3. Rb represents the resistance value of the human body, which is variable according to individuals and humidity of the skin, but is conventionally considered to be around 500Ω.
[0031] Importantly, the filter of the invention includes a combination of a capacitor C3 with a safety device 120 that is configured to present a low impedance to noise signals, and a significantly higher impedance to currents arising from the discharge of capacitor C3. In this manner, the current If flowing through the body in case of a shock is considerably reduced.
[0032] The safety device of the invention is effective in reducing the discharge current traversing a human body both in the event of a direct contact and in the event of an indirect one. In embodiments, the impedance of the safety device may become infinite in the event of a discharge. In these cases, the safety device behaves like a switch and effectively disconnects the capacitor, preventing any discharge current.
[0033] The represented example has the safety device in a “low-side” position between the capacitor C3 and the ground connector. The safety device 120 could be also connected in a “high-side” position between the capacitor C3 and the conductor 91.
[0034] Capacitor C3 and safety device 120 are represented in a series connection in
[0035] To illustrate the effect of the safety device 120, reference is made to the plot of
[0036] Preferably, the safety device 120 is configured to exhibit a resistive impedance during the discharge. This is not an essential feature of the invention, however, and the safety device may also present a complex impedance including a real part (a resistance) and an imaginary part, either of capacitive or inductive nature.
[0037] It is not required that the safety device 120 be a linear device. The invention also includes realizations in which the safety device is not linear and exhibits a dynamic nonconstant impedance. The invention explicitly comprises realizations in which the safety has diodes, transistors or other nonlinear elements that contribute significantly to its impedance.
[0038] During normal functioning, the safety device should interfere as least as possible with the filter function. This is achieved through a low impedance during normal functioning. The distinction between a normal functioning and a dangerous discharge can be obtained in several ways, all compatible with the invention. In a preferable embodiment, the safety device exhibits a first impedance at high frequency, where the noise is expected to occur, and a second impedance at low frequency that is where the energy of the discharge lies. In addition, or in alternative, other measurements can be used to distinguish between normal filtering and dangerous discharges, including for example the duration of the pulses and the polarity of the current. One expects in fact, during a shock discharge, a negative pulse of current of several milliseconds while the noise that should be filtered can be regarded as a sum of bipolar signals, sinusoidal or impulsive, at several kHz or above.
[0039] The first impedance is configured to be as low as possible not to degrade filter performances, while the second impedance is considerably higher to slow down and attenuate the discharge current. Preferably, the first impedance is at least ten time smaller than the impedance of the capacitor at the cut-off frequency of the filter.
[0040] Preferably the second impedance is essentially resistive. Preferably, the resistive part of the second impedance is at least 100 Ohm or, more preferably, at least equal or above the resistance of the human body conventionally set as 500 Ohm, better if above 1000 Ohm.
[0041] The safety device 120 can have any structure compatible with the claimed function and presenting the variable impedance disclosed above. In possible embodiments, the safety device 120 is an active electronic device that is configured to sense the characteristics of the current flowing through the capacitor, or of the voltage across the capacitor, or any other suitable electric signal that indicates a discharge condition and includes a controlled actuator that gives rise to the desired impedance during a discharge. The invention is not limited to this kind of devices, however and may include other realization that inherently exhibit the desired impedances.
[0042]
[0043] The control unit 230a can be realized in many ways and may consist in an analog filter or in a nonlinear analog circuit, and may include comparators, logic devices, A/D and D/A converter, timers and microcontrollers. In this latter case, the impedance of the safety device may be controlled by a software code run by the microcontroller.
[0044] The example of
[0045] Concerning
[0046] The actuator used to change the impedance needs not be a continuous one but could also consist in the choice of one among a finite number of states. In a possible implementation the actuator may be a switch or a group of switches inserting one or several resistor or complex inductive elements in the current path. Such is the case of the circuit of
[0047]
[0048] It is easy to add the safety device of the invention to existing filters. Insofar as the safety device adds a negligible impedance during the normal functioning of the filter and intervenes only in the event of a discharge, there is little need to change the dimensioning or the topology of the filter. In this way, the invention provides an excellent opportunity of upgrading and/or retrofitting existing products.
[0049] It is understood that the four variants do not exhaust the space of possibilities and that the invention includes many more.
REFERENCE SYMBOLS OF THE FIGURES
[0050] 15 supply line, DC bus
[0051] 20 heat pump
[0052] 25 battery pack
[0053] 30 power distribution unit
[0054] 40 DC/DC converter
[0055] 45 charger
[0056] 48 charge line
[0057] 49 connector
[0058] 50 EMC filter
[0059] 51 passive filter
[0060] 60 motor drive unit
[0061] 70 motor
[0062] 75 load, victim device
[0063] 91 positive conductor
[0064] 91a positive supply, input (source side)
[0065] 91b positive supply, output (load side)
[0066] 92 negative conductor
[0067] 92a negative supply, input (source side)
[0068] 92b negative supply, output (load side)
[0069] 100 ECU
[0070] 101 active filter stage (power stage)
[0071] 110 current sense, current transformer
[0072] 120 safety device
[0073] 230a-d control unit
[0074] 240 switch
[0075] 243 voltage-controlled current source
[0076] 246 variable resistor, transistor
[0077] 250 current probe, current transformer
[0078] 255 shunt impedance
[0079] 265 resistor
[0080] 310a-d discharge current plots