Ground Protection Coil
20190180920 ยท 2019-06-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01F2005/027
ELECTRICITY
H01F27/006
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A ground protection coil for insertion into a circuit includes an inner coil section consisting of a wire wound in a first direction for a first number of turns and an outer coil section consisting of the wire wound in a second direction for a second number of turns. The second direction is at an angle of approximately 90 degrees from the first direction.
Claims
1. A ground protection coil consisting of: an inner coil section consisting of a wire that is wound in a first direction for a first number of turns; and an outer coil section consisting of the wire that is wound in a second direction for a second number of turns; whereas the second direction is at an angle of approximately 90 degrees from the first direction.
2. The ground protection coil of claim 1, wherein the ground protection coil is inserted in a circuit between an electrical device and ground potential.
3. The ground protection coil of claim 1, wherein the first number of turns is the same as the second number of turns.
4. The ground protection coil of claim 1, wherein the first number of turns is different from the second number of turns.
5. The ground protection coil of claim 1, wherein the wire is a path of a printed circuit board.
6. A method of protecting an electrical device from ground surges, the method comprising: installing a first end of an electrically conducting jumper on a first location of a ground path that provides a ground potential to the electrical device; installing a second end of the electrically conducting jumper on a second location of a ground path; cutting the ground path into two segments between the first location and the second location; providing a ground protection coil consisting of: an inner coil section consisting of a wire that is wound in a first direction for a first number of turns; an outer coil section consisting of the wire wound in a second direction for a second number of turns; whereas the second direction is at an angle of approximately 90 degrees from the first direction; electrically connecting the ground protection coil into the ground path by connecting a first end of the wire of the ground protection coil to a first segment of the two segments and connecting a second end of the wire of the ground protection coil to a second segment of the two segments; and removing the electrically conducting jumper.
7. (canceled)
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the first number of turns is the same as the second number of turns.
9. The method of claim 6, wherein the first number of turns is different from the second number of turns.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein the wire is a path of a printed circuit board.
11. The method of claim 6, wherein the ground path is a grounding wire running from a lightning rod to the electrical device, the lightning rod is sunk within the earth.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the grounding wire runs up a side of a telephone pole.
13. The method of claim 6, wherein the electrical device is a cable television distribution amplifier.
14. A ground protection coil consisting of: a first winding consisting of a first serpentine printed circuit path running in a first direction for a first number of turns; an input lead connected to a first end of the first winding; a second winding consisting of a second serpentine printed circuit path running in a second direction for a second number of turns, whereas a second end of the first winding is electrically connected to a second end of the second winding; an output lead connected to a first end of the second winding; whereas the second direction is at an angle of 90 degrees from the first direction.
15. The ground protection coil of claim 14, wherein the ground protection coil is inserted into a circuit between an electrical device and ground potential.
16. The ground protection coil of claim 14, wherein the first number of turns is the same as the second number of turns.
17. The ground protection coil of claim 14, wherein the first number of turns is different from the second number of turns.
18. The ground protection coil of claim 14, wherein the first serpentine printed circuit path is on a first side of a printed circuit board and the second serpentine printed circuit path is on a second side of the printed circuit board.
19. The ground protection coil of claim 14, wherein the first serpentine printed circuit path is on a first layer of a printed circuit board and the second serpentine printed circuit path is on a second layer of the printed circuit board.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The invention can be best understood by those having ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Throughout the following detailed description, the same reference numerals refer to the same elements in all figures.
[0021] Any coiled wire of sufficient length will have inductance. The inductance will vary with the number of turns of wire in the coil. Current flowing through a coil of wire will create an electrical field. Each turn of wire has a field that affects nearby turns of wire. These fields slow the flow of current through the coiled wire. When a coil is wound over an iron core, the field magnetizes the core and the inductance is higher. Losses in the coil result in heating of the coil and core. Therefore, a typical iron core inductor must be made very large in order to carry a high load current without overheating.
[0022] Without the iron core, only the magnetic fields resist current flow and those fields are not nearly as strong as magnetic fields in a coil having an iron core. When used on alternating current power systems, coreless coils can carry much more current without overheating than similar size coils having iron cores.
[0023] Unfortunately due to the small fields, prior coreless coils are not useful for surge protection as they do not reduce surge levels significantly.
[0024] U.S. Pat. No. 7,085,115 for non-ferrous surge balancing coil describes a pair of coils placed such that the windings were located 90 degrees to each other. This surge balancing coil was designed to be used in electrical power and data systems where each opposed winding of the coil is independent and connected to a different power conductor.
[0025] The ground protection coil 10 (see
[0026] This ground protection coil 10 provides resistance to sudden changes of ground current attempting to enter the power system through an electrical grounding path, while providing low resistance to lower frequency changes (e.g. DC to 60 Hz).
[0027] In some applications, two or more ground protection coils 10 are inserted into power lines to reduce the passage of transient surge spikes.
[0028] Referring to
[0029] In some embodiments the inner coil section 16 and the outer coil section 20 are made from a single, continuous wire. In some embodiments the inner coil section 16 is wrapped in one direction, then the inner coil section 16 is rotated 90 degrees and the outer coil section 20 is wrapped over the inner coil section 16. The wire size/gauge and number of turns is dependent upon the amount of current carrying capacity needed. For example, for a 15 amp load, at least a 14 gauge wire size is required.
[0030] The coil is typically manufactured by winding wire on a coil form. Typically 3 turns of wire or more are wound, though it has been shown as few as 3 turns work although somewhat weakly and that more than 20 turns has diminishing returns due to the cost of wire (e.g. copper wire).
[0031] In some embodiments, the inner coil section 16 has the same number of turns as the outer coil section 20. For example, if the inner coil section 16 has 20 turns, then the outer coil section 20 will also have 20 turns. In some embodiments, the inner coil section 16 has a different number of turns as the outer coil section 20. For example, if the inner coil section 16 has 20 turns, then the outer coil section 20 has some number of turns other than 20.
[0032] Referring to
[0033] In one embodiment, multiple printed circuit board(s) 110 with are stacked with serpentine circuit traces 116 on each printed circuit board 110 running at 90 degrees with respect to serpentine circuit traces 116 on the adjacent printed circuit board 110. One printed circuit board 110 has an input connector and another has an output connector.
[0034] In another embodiment, printed circuit board(s) 110 are made with serpentine circuit traces 116 on one side of the printed circuit board 110 running at 90 degrees with respect to serpentine circuit traces 116 on the opposing side of the printed circuit board 110. One side of the printed circuit board 110 has an input connector at a first end of the serpentine circuit trace 116 on that side, the other side of the printed circuit board 110 has an output connector a first end of the serpentine circuit trace 116 on that side, and there is a through-board connection (via) between the second end of both serpentine circuit traces 116.
[0035] In another embodiment, printed circuit board(s) 110 are made with serpentine circuit traces 116 on multiple layers of the printed circuit board 110 running at 90 degrees with respect to serpentine circuit traces 116 on other layers of the printed circuit board 110. One layer of the printed circuit board 110 has an input connector at a first end of the serpentine circuit trace 116 on that layer, another layer of the printed circuit board 110 has an output connector a first end of the serpentine circuit trace 116 on that layer, and there is a through-layer connections (via) between the second end of both serpentine circuit traces 116. Multiple are anticipated, but a minimum of 4 layers is preferred. In the example shown in
[0036] Referring to
[0037] Referring to
[0038] As shown in
[0039] It should be noted that it is anticipated that the ground protection coil 10 will be used to protect many devices other than the cable television distribution amplifier 210 that is shown as an example.
[0040] Equivalent elements can be substituted for the ones set forth above such that they perform in substantially the same manner in substantially the same way for achieving substantially the same result.
[0041] It is believed that the system and method as described and many of its attendant advantages will be understood by the foregoing description. It is also believed that it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construction and arrangement of the components thereof without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention or without sacrificing all of its material advantages. The form herein before described being merely exemplary and explanatory embodiment thereof. It is the intention of the following claims to encompass and include such changes.