Harmonics analysis in a DC-DC converter based line frequency inverter for domestic lighting loads

Author(s):  
Ahamed Khan ◽  
Maiyaki Abdullahi Alkali ◽  
S. Parasuraman ◽  
I. Elamvazuthi ◽  
M. Amudha ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
pp. 477-478
Author(s):  
Takayuki Hirokawa ◽  
Eiji Hiraki ◽  
Toshihiko Tanaka ◽  
Makoto Imai ◽  
Kenji Yasui ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 2568
Author(s):  
Tadeas Bednar ◽  
Branko Babusiak ◽  
Michal Labuda ◽  
Milan Smetana ◽  
Stefan Borik

A capacitive measurement of the biosignals is a very comfortable and unobtrusive way suitable for long-term and wearable monitoring of health conditions. This type of sensing is very susceptible to noise from the surroundings. One of the main noise sources is power-line noise, which acts as a common-mode voltage at the input terminals of the acquisition unit. The origin and methods of noise reduction are described on electric models. Two methods of noise removal are modeled and experimentally verified in the paper. The first method uses a passive capacitive grounding electrode, and the second uses an active capacitive Driven Right Leg (DRL) electrode. The effect of grounding electrode size on noise suppression is experimentally investigated. The increasing electrode area reduces power-line noise: the power of power-line frequency within the measured signal is 70.96 dB, 59.13 dB, and 43.44 dB for a grounding electrode area of 1650 cm2, 3300 cm2, and 4950 cm2, respectively. The capacitive DRL electrode shows better efficiency in common-mode noise rejection than the grounding electrode. When using an electrode area of 1650 cm2, the DRL achieved 46.3 dB better attenuation than the grounding electrode at power-line frequency. In contrast to the grounding electrode, the DRL electrode reduces a capacitive measurement system’s financial costs due to the smaller electrode area made of the costly conductive textile.


Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 88
Author(s):  
Kosala Gunawardane ◽  
Nalin Bandara ◽  
Kasun Subasinghage ◽  
Nihal Kularatna

Cleaner and greener energy sources have proliferated on a worldwide basis, creating distributed energy systems. Given the unreliable nature of the renewable sources such as solar and wind, they are traditionally based on inverters interfaced with legacy AC grid systems. While efficiency, output waveform quality and other technical specifications of inverters keep improving gradually, only limited attention is given to widening the input range of inverters. This paper presents a new supercapacitor assisted (SCA) technique to widen the input range of an inverter without modifying the inverter itself. Developing a prototype version of a 24 V DC input capable supercapacitor-assisted wide input (SCASWI) inverter using a supercapacitor circulation front end and a commercial 12 V DC line frequency inverter is detailed in the article, explaining how the SCASWI inverter technique doubles the input voltage while maintaining the useful characteristics of the commercial inverter. The new technique has the added advantage of DC-UPS capability based on a long-life supercapacitor module.


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