A Multiprobe Inductive Coupling Method for Online Impedance Measurement of Electrical Devices Distributed in Multibranch Cables

2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (9) ◽  
pp. 5975-5977
Author(s):  
Zhenyu Zhao ◽  
Kye Yak See
2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 97-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Sung Kim ◽  
Yu-Ki Lee ◽  
Se-Ryong Kim ◽  
Jae-Gil Lee ◽  
Gwan-Soo Park

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Lin Chou

<p>The online impedance serves as one of the most crucial specification to evaluate the health status and efficiency of an electrical device or system. The inductive coupling technique is a preferred approach to measure the online impedance due to the ease of implementation of the circuit which has zero physical contact to the live electrical system. The existing inductive coupling method deployed to measure the online impedance of an electrical device under test (DUT) adopts two probes in total: an injecting inductive probe (IIP) and a receiving inductive probe (RIP). An open/short/load (OSL) calibration procedure is implemented to eradicate the ramifications of the probe-to-probe coupling, however, based on the assumption that the calibration criterions (shorted, open and 50Ω) are approximated to their theoretical values in a specified frequency range. Hence, any measurement with frequency outside the specified range (i.e. larger than 1 MHz) will not be accurate due to the frequency-dependent residual inductances and capacitances of the calibration model. To overcome the aforesaid limitation, this paper introduces an improved calibration procedure which is applicable for a wider frequency range which takes the frequency-dependent characteristics into consideration. With the two-probe measurement setup (TPMS), the adopted improved calibration procedure is introduced to eradicate the ramifications of the probe-to-probe coupling with the intention to refine the accuracy of the extracted online impedance.<a></a></p><p></p>


Author(s):  
Arun Shankar Narayanan ◽  
Zhenyu Zhao ◽  
Eng Kee Chua ◽  
Arjuna Weerasinghe ◽  
Kye Yak See ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ike Yuni Wulandari

<p>In the current era of the industrial revolution 4.0, the need for time, labor, and cost efficiency is a basic requirement for human life, especially regarding electrical energy sources. The supply of commercial electricity is still using electricity cables to deliver electricity to the load. Therefore, one of the ways of sending or transferring electrical power that continues to be developed today is wireless electricity transfer. The wireless transfer of electric power has several advantages compared to the use of cables, which can increase the convenience in the use of electrical equipment and can reduce the amount of electronic waste. This research will study the techniques or methods of near-field wireless energy transfer systems, namely the inductive coupling method, the magnetic resonance coupling method and the capacitive coupling method. The results of this study propose an optimal modeling of wireless power transfer so that results and quality are better, taking into account the distance between the sender and receiver because the work efficiency of wireless power transfer decreases with respect to distance. And the signal transmission frequency is low for inductive coupling, while the resulting frequency will be high on magnetic resonance coupling and capacitive coupling.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Lin Chou

<p>The online impedance serves as one of the most crucial specification to evaluate the health status and efficiency of an electrical device or system. The inductive coupling technique is a preferred approach to measure the online impedance due to the ease of implementation of the circuit which has zero physical contact to the live electrical system. The existing inductive coupling method deployed to measure the online impedance of an electrical device under test (DUT) adopts two probes in total: an injecting inductive probe (IIP) and a receiving inductive probe (RIP). An open/short/load (OSL) calibration procedure is implemented to eradicate the ramifications of the probe-to-probe coupling, however, based on the assumption that the calibration criterions (shorted, open and 50Ω) are approximated to their theoretical values in a specified frequency range. Hence, any measurement with frequency outside the specified range (i.e. larger than 1 MHz) will not be accurate due to the frequency-dependent residual inductances and capacitances of the calibration model. To overcome the aforesaid limitation, this paper introduces an improved calibration procedure which is applicable for a wider frequency range which takes the frequency-dependent characteristics into consideration. With the two-probe measurement setup (TPMS), the adopted improved calibration procedure is introduced to eradicate the ramifications of the probe-to-probe coupling with the intention to refine the accuracy of the extracted online impedance.<a></a></p><p></p>


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