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IEC 61000-4-5

IEC 61000-4-5 is an international standard by the International Electrotechnical Commission on surge immunity. In an electrical installation, disruptive surges can appear on power and data lines. Their sources include abrupt load switching and faults in the power system, as well as induced lightning transients from an indirect lightning strike (direct lightning is out of scope in this standard). It necessitates the test of surge immunity in electrical or electronic equipment. IEC 61000-4-5 defines test set-up, procedures, and classification levels.

In particular, it standardizes the required surge voltage and current waveforms for laboratory testing, with the "1.2/50-8/20 μs" impulse being the most frequently used surge waveform. Although this standard is designed for testing equipment as a whole at system level, not for individual protection devices, in practice this surge waveform is often also used for rating Transient Voltage Suppressors (TVS), Gas Discharge Tubes (GDT), Metal Oxide Varistors (MOV), and other surge protection devices.

The current version is Third Edition (2014), amended in 2017.[1]

Test Setup edit

Two major components are defined in this standard: two types of Combination Wave Generators (CWG) and various Coupling/Decoupling Networks (CDN) depending on the test level and type.

First, a Combination Wave Generator is a standardized impulse generator (sometimes also referred to as a lightning surge generator), it's used for producing simulated, standard voltage and current surges under laboratory conditions. Subsequently, the surge is transmitted into a port of the Device-Under-Test (DUT) via a coupling network. Finally, to prevent surges from reaching other devices via the power system during the test, a decoupling network is also inserted between the power line and the DUT.

Surge Waveforms edit

The Combination Wave Generator is required to have an output floating from ground, and be capable of generating both positive and negative impulses. Its repetition rate should be at least one impulse per 60 seconds.

The surge is defined by the Combination Wave Generator's open-circuit voltage and short-circuit current waveforms, characterized by front time, duration, and peak values. With an open circuit output, the surge voltage is a double exponential pulse in the form of  . With a short circuit output, the surge current waveform is a damped sine wave. The ratio between the peak open-circuit voltage and the peak short-circuit current is 2, giving an effective output impedance of 2 Ω.

 
Open-Circuit Voltage
(exaggerated rising edge, not to scale, actual rising edge is almost a vertical line)
 
Short-Circuit Current

Usually, the voltage waveform has a 1.2 μs front time and a 50 μs duration, and the current waveform has a 8 μs front time and 20 μs duration. This is the most commonly used surge waveform for most applications, often referred to as a "1.2/50-8/20 μs" surge.

Alternatively, for outdoor telecommunication networks that experience a higher surge level, the standard also defines a more energetic generator with a 10/700 μs voltage waveform and a 5/320 μs current waveform.

Front time and duration are not measured directly, but as virtual parameters derived from measurements. For open-circuit voltage, front time is defined to be 1.67 times the 30%-90% rise time, duration is defined as the time interval between the 50% point of its rising edge and the 50% point of its falling edge. For short-circuit current, front time is defined to be 1.25 times the 10%-90% rise time, duration is defined as 1.18 times time interval between the 50% point of its rising edge and the 50% point of its falling edge.

At the output of the generator, a 30% undershoot below zero is allowed. There's no overshoot or overshoot limit at the output of the Coupling Network.

Comparison with different standards edit

IEC 60060-1 edit

It's worth noting that both "1.2/50 μs" voltage and "8/20 μs" current impulses are classic waveforms with a well-established history of use in high-voltage testing for electric power transmission.[2] Thus, these waveforms are also defined by IEC 60060-1 "High-Voltage Test Techniques" and other standards in this context. In fact, the waveform definitions in IEC 61000-4-5 were originally based on IEC 60060-1.[3][4]

Nevertheless, there are important differences. In traditional high-voltage testing, voltage and current impulses are tested separately, not in combination. The "1.2/50 μs" generator is designed for insulation testing, and produces a high-voltage, low-current impulse into a high-impedance load. The output current of this generator is on the milliampere scale.[2][5] The "8/20 μs" generator is designed for surge arrester testing, and produces a high-current surge into a low-impedance load.[2] On the other hand, modern electronic devices can be high and low-impedance loads simultaneously due to non-linear devices, protection circuits, and arcing in a dielectric breakdown. As a result, it motivated the creation of the Combination Wave Generator with the ability to generate a high-voltage, high-current output during the same surge.[2] In addition, both standards have different waveform tolerances[6] and other technical requirements. Thus, IEC 61000-4-5 is not to be confused with IEC 60060-1 and other high-voltage tests that also use a "1.2/50 μs" or "8/20 μs" impulse.[5]

IEC 61000-4-5 Ed. 2 and Ed. 3 edit

When a Coupling Network is used, past experience has shown inconsistent waveforms between different generators. Thus, an important change in IEC 61000-4-5 Ed. 3 is that a Combination Wave Generator must be verified only with a 18 μF capacitor attached at the output. This causes a significant impact to the short-circuit current waveform. If the generator is to be designed without the coupling capacitor in mind, the output would no longer be standard compliant.[7]

Third Edition also simplified waveform definitions. The earlier standard contained two definitions of "1.2/50-8/20 μs" waveform parameters, based on either IEC 60060-1 or IEC 60469-1, and two definitions of "10/700-5/320 μs" waveform parameters, based on either IEC 60060-1 or ITU-T K series. Ed. 3 removed references to these standards and gives standalone definitions.[3][4] Especially, front time has been redefined in terms of rise time, rather than a time interval from an extrapolated "virtual origin" using IEC 60060-1's approach. This allows one to use the built-in measurement feature on an oscilloscope, simplifying test procedures. For practical purposes, the differences between both definitions are negligible.[7] However, because the new definition was created using IEC 60060-1 as its basis, a generator calibrated according to IEC 60469-1's definitions may no longer be standard compliant.[4]

Circuit Analysis edit

1.2/50-8/20 μs Generator edit

 
Simplified Schematic of the 1.2/50-8/20 μs Combination Wave Generator

The Combination Wave Generator is essentially a capacitor discharge circuit. Initially, the switch is open, a high voltage source charges the energy-storage capacitor   through a current-limiting resistor  , which is assumed to be sufficiently large to isolate the high-voltage source from the load (the voltage source only charges the capacitor, the impulse current from the voltage source itself is negligible). The switch is then closed to deliver an impulse from the capacitor to the load through a pulse-forming network, which consists of a rise time shaping inductor  , two impulse duration shaping resistors   and  , and an impedance matching resistor  .

The standard does not specify component values or practical circuits, any suitable design that conforms to the standard requirements can be used.

A complete circuit analysis of the ideal surge generator, including design equations and component values, is available in the presentation Introduction To Voltage Surge Immunity Testing by Hesterman et, al.[8] An updated derivation for the Third Edition is given in the paper Elementary and ideal equivalent circuit model of the 1,2/50-8/20 μs combination wave generator by Carobbi et, al.[7]

Design Equations edit

The following design equations are derived by Carobbi et, al. In these equations, the charging voltage is  , and the components are  ,  ,  ,  , and  .[7]

Open-Circuit Voltage edit

For open-circuit voltage, its Laplace transform is:

  (1)

Where:

  (2)
  (3)

Thus, open-circuit voltage is a double exponential waveform:

  (4)

The voltage reaches its peak value at:

  (5)

And the peak voltage is:

  (6)
Short-Circuit Current edit

When the output is shorted, note that the last resistor   (  in the schematic) is effectively removed.

For short-circuit current, its Laplace transform is:

  (7)

Where:

  (8)
  (9)
  (10)

Thus, short-circuit current is a damped sine wave (from an underdamped RLC circuit):

  (11)

The current reaches its peak value at:

  (12)

And the peak current is:

  (13)
Solution edit

Ignore the amplitude in 4, it becomes:

  (14)

By substituting  :

  (15)

The ratio   should be selected to make  's waveform have a duration over front-time ratio of  . By numerically evaluating  's waveform (including its front time and duration) while varying this ratio, the solution is found to be  . Next,   and   are computed by numerically varying   until 14's waveform has a front time of 1.2 μs. The solution is   = 68.2 μs. Therefore,   = 0.4 μs.

Ignore the amplitude in 11, it becomes:

  (16)

By substituting  :

  (17)

The value   should be selected to make  's waveform have a duration over front time ratio of  . By numerically evaluating  's waveform (including its front time and duration) while varying  , the solution is found to be  . Next,   is computed by varying it numerically until 16's waveform has a duration of 20 μs. With the correct duration, front time is also automatically satisfied. The solution is  .

Once  ,  ,   and   are solved, the circuit component values can be obtained,   is derived first.

Note that the effective output impedance is (by dividing 6 by 13):

  (18)

And can be rearranged as:

  (19)

Set output impedance   = 2 Ω, the solution is   = 26.1 Ω.

Finally, the closed-form solution of other component values is:

  (20)
  (21)
  (22)
  (23)

The solution is   = 5.93 μF,   = 10.9 μH,   = 20.2 Ω, and   = 0.814 Ω.

Output peak voltage is slightly lower than the charging voltage. To scale the voltage, use the amplitude in 4 and set E = 1, this yields  . Thus, the capacitor charging voltage is   times the output peak voltage.

Note that this solution doesn't consider the coupling capacitor, and also has an undershoot of  . The solution to both problems are discussed in the following sections.

Coupling Capacitor edit

An extra 18 μF series coupling capacitor has almost no effect on the open-circuit voltage, but affects short-circuit current significantly.

Carobbi et, al. suggested the following iterative, trial-and-error design procedure to take the effect of the series coupling capacitor into account. First, without considering the capacitor, the original circuit analysis is reused, and circuit components values are obtained through a numerical solver. Next, the capacitor is added and the change of short-circuit waveform is noted. Then, the target waveform parameters for the numerical solver are "pre-distorted", obtaining a new set of component values (by changing front time, duration, and effective output impedance). For example, if the peak current becomes too low, component values are recalculated for a higher peak current by adjusting the effective output impedance target. These steps are repeated until the desired waveform is obtained. The result given here is accurate within 1.5% after two iterations, more iterations are required for higher accuracy. [7]

Results edit

Ideal Component Values
(Numerical Approximation)
18 μF
Series
Capacitor
Charging
Voltage
(V)
 
(μF)
 
(μH)
 
(Ω)
 
(Ω)
 
(Ω)
Current
Undershoot
(%)
By
No 1060 5.93 10.9 0.814 20.2 26.1 34 Carobbi et, al.[7]
No 1082 6.04 10.4 0.941 25.1 19.8 27.4 Hesterman, et. al.[8]
Yes 1063 9.98 10.7 0.832 9.39 25.5 39 Carobbi et, al.[7]

Both sources showed that it's not possible to exactly meet the waveform requirements without violating the 30% short-circuit current overshoot limit. Nevertheless, Hesterman, et. al. presented an approximate solution by adjusting the waveform parameters within tolerance.[8] The derivation by Carobbi et, al. ignored the undershoot requirement, pointing out that a practical circuit may reduce overshoot to even practically zero in some cases if an unidirectional switch is used.[7] Also, IEC 61000-4-5 states that there's no overshoot or undershoot requirement at the output of a coupling network.

These solutions are only valid for an ideal generator, suitable for circuit simulation. It can be used as a starting point of practical generator design, but component values have to be adjusted further due to switch non-idealities. In an ideal circuit, open-circuit voltage rise time is governed by the time constant  , but a practical switch may cause rise time degradation. Further, due to the use of different switch types, a real generator may produce either a bidirectional impulse with undershoot, or an unidirectional impulse without undershoot. An ideal circuit model cannot predict these non-linear effects, and should not be treated as a complete circuit model of practical generators.[7]

10/700-5/320 μs Generator edit

A different Combination Wave Generator is used for the 10/700-5/320 μs surge.

 
Simplified Schematic of the 10/700-5/320 μs Combination Wave Generator

Test Levels edit

The following table shows the peak open-circuit voltage and short-circuit current of the Combination Wave Generator.

Electrical Surge Test Levels (IEC/EN 61000-4-5)
Class Test Level
(V)
Max Peak Current @ 2 Ω
(A)
1 500 250
2 1000 500
3 2000 1000
4 4000 2000
X Special Special
X can be any level specified in product specific standards.
It can be above, below or between the others.

The full current is not always actually applied to the DUT. Depending on the test setup and port type, an additional resistor may be used as a part of the coupling network to reduce the peak surge current into the DUT, raising the output impedance to 12 Ω or 42 Ω.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "IEC 61000-4-5:2014+AMD1:2017 CSV Consolidated version - Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) - Part 4-5: Testing and measurement techniques - Surge immunity test". webstore.iec.ch. International Electrotechnical Commission. 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Richman, Peter (1983). Single-Output, Voltage and Current Surge Generation for Testing Electronic Systems. 1983 IEEE International Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility. IEEE.
  3. ^ a b Niechcial, Frank (2020). Technical Note 0107: Burst and Surge, Summary of Changes to the Standard (PDF) (Technical report). Ametek CTS GmbH.
  4. ^ a b c IEC 61000-4-5 第3版 改訂発行の対応とその改訂詳細について (PDF) (Technical report) (in Japanese). NoiseKen. 2014-05-29.
  5. ^ a b Rowe, Martin (2011-12-16). "Standards define test impulses, mostly". EDN.
  6. ^ G.P. Fotis; I.F. Gonos; I.A. Stathopulos (2004). Simulation and Experiment for Surge Immunity According to EN 61000-4-5 (PDF) (Technical report). National Technical University of Athens.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Carlo F. M. Carobbi; Alessio Bonci (2013). "Elementary and ideal equivalent circuit model of the 1,2/50-8/20 μs combination wave generator". IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility Magazine. 2 (4). IEEE: 51-57. doi:10.1109/MEMC.2013.6714698. S2CID 44247646.
  8. ^ a b c Hesterman, Bryce; Powell, Douglas (2007-09-18). Introduction To Voltage Surge Immunity Testing (PDF). IEEE Power Electronics Society Denver Chapter Meeting.

External links edit

61000, international, standard, international, electrotechnical, commission, surge, immunity, electrical, installation, disruptive, surges, appear, power, data, lines, their, sources, include, abrupt, load, switching, faults, power, system, well, induced, ligh. IEC 61000 4 5 is an international standard by the International Electrotechnical Commission on surge immunity In an electrical installation disruptive surges can appear on power and data lines Their sources include abrupt load switching and faults in the power system as well as induced lightning transients from an indirect lightning strike direct lightning is out of scope in this standard It necessitates the test of surge immunity in electrical or electronic equipment IEC 61000 4 5 defines test set up procedures and classification levels In particular it standardizes the required surge voltage and current waveforms for laboratory testing with the 1 2 50 8 20 ms impulse being the most frequently used surge waveform Although this standard is designed for testing equipment as a whole at system level not for individual protection devices in practice this surge waveform is often also used for rating Transient Voltage Suppressors TVS Gas Discharge Tubes GDT Metal Oxide Varistors MOV and other surge protection devices The current version is Third Edition 2014 amended in 2017 1 Contents 1 Test Setup 2 Surge Waveforms 2 1 Comparison with different standards 2 1 1 IEC 60060 1 2 1 2 IEC 61000 4 5 Ed 2 and Ed 3 3 Circuit Analysis 3 1 1 2 50 8 20 ms Generator 3 1 1 Design Equations 3 1 1 1 Open Circuit Voltage 3 1 1 2 Short Circuit Current 3 1 1 3 Solution 3 1 2 Coupling Capacitor 3 1 3 Results 3 2 10 700 5 320 ms Generator 4 Test Levels 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTest Setup editTwo major components are defined in this standard two types of Combination Wave Generators CWG and various Coupling Decoupling Networks CDN depending on the test level and type First a Combination Wave Generator is a standardized impulse generator sometimes also referred to as a lightning surge generator it s used for producing simulated standard voltage and current surges under laboratory conditions Subsequently the surge is transmitted into a port of the Device Under Test DUT via a coupling network Finally to prevent surges from reaching other devices via the power system during the test a decoupling network is also inserted between the power line and the DUT Surge Waveforms editThe Combination Wave Generator is required to have an output floating from ground and be capable of generating both positive and negative impulses Its repetition rate should be at least one impulse per 60 seconds The surge is defined by the Combination Wave Generator s open circuit voltage and short circuit current waveforms characterized by front time duration and peak values With an open circuit output the surge voltage is a double exponential pulse in the form of k e a t e b t displaystyle k e alpha t e beta t nbsp With a short circuit output the surge current waveform is a damped sine wave The ratio between the peak open circuit voltage and the peak short circuit current is 2 giving an effective output impedance of 2 W nbsp Open Circuit Voltage exaggerated rising edge not to scale actual rising edge is almost a vertical line nbsp Short Circuit Current Usually the voltage waveform has a 1 2 ms front time and a 50 ms duration and the current waveform has a 8 ms front time and 20 ms duration This is the most commonly used surge waveform for most applications often referred to as a 1 2 50 8 20 ms surge Alternatively for outdoor telecommunication networks that experience a higher surge level the standard also defines a more energetic generator with a 10 700 ms voltage waveform and a 5 320 ms current waveform Front time and duration are not measured directly but as virtual parameters derived from measurements For open circuit voltage front time is defined to be 1 67 times the 30 90 rise time duration is defined as the time interval between the 50 point of its rising edge and the 50 point of its falling edge For short circuit current front time is defined to be 1 25 times the 10 90 rise time duration is defined as 1 18 times time interval between the 50 point of its rising edge and the 50 point of its falling edge At the output of the generator a 30 undershoot below zero is allowed There s no overshoot or overshoot limit at the output of the Coupling Network Comparison with different standards edit IEC 60060 1 edit It s worth noting that both 1 2 50 ms voltage and 8 20 ms current impulses are classic waveforms with a well established history of use in high voltage testing for electric power transmission 2 Thus these waveforms are also defined by IEC 60060 1 High Voltage Test Techniques and other standards in this context In fact the waveform definitions in IEC 61000 4 5 were originally based on IEC 60060 1 3 4 Nevertheless there are important differences In traditional high voltage testing voltage and current impulses are tested separately not in combination The 1 2 50 ms generator is designed for insulation testing and produces a high voltage low current impulse into a high impedance load The output current of this generator is on the milliampere scale 2 5 The 8 20 ms generator is designed for surge arrester testing and produces a high current surge into a low impedance load 2 On the other hand modern electronic devices can be high and low impedance loads simultaneously due to non linear devices protection circuits and arcing in a dielectric breakdown As a result it motivated the creation of the Combination Wave Generator with the ability to generate a high voltage high current output during the same surge 2 In addition both standards have different waveform tolerances 6 and other technical requirements Thus IEC 61000 4 5 is not to be confused with IEC 60060 1 and other high voltage tests that also use a 1 2 50 ms or 8 20 ms impulse 5 IEC 61000 4 5 Ed 2 and Ed 3 edit When a Coupling Network is used past experience has shown inconsistent waveforms between different generators Thus an important change in IEC 61000 4 5 Ed 3 is that a Combination Wave Generator must be verified only with a 18 mF capacitor attached at the output This causes a significant impact to the short circuit current waveform If the generator is to be designed without the coupling capacitor in mind the output would no longer be standard compliant 7 Third Edition also simplified waveform definitions The earlier standard contained two definitions of 1 2 50 8 20 ms waveform parameters based on either IEC 60060 1 or IEC 60469 1 and two definitions of 10 700 5 320 ms waveform parameters based on either IEC 60060 1 or ITU T K series Ed 3 removed references to these standards and gives standalone definitions 3 4 Especially front time has been redefined in terms of rise time rather than a time interval from an extrapolated virtual origin using IEC 60060 1 s approach This allows one to use the built in measurement feature on an oscilloscope simplifying test procedures For practical purposes the differences between both definitions are negligible 7 However because the new definition was created using IEC 60060 1 as its basis a generator calibrated according to IEC 60469 1 s definitions may no longer be standard compliant 4 Circuit Analysis edit1 2 50 8 20 ms Generator edit nbsp Simplified Schematic of the 1 2 50 8 20 ms Combination Wave Generator The Combination Wave Generator is essentially a capacitor discharge circuit Initially the switch is open a high voltage source charges the energy storage capacitor C c displaystyle C c nbsp through a current limiting resistor R c displaystyle R c nbsp which is assumed to be sufficiently large to isolate the high voltage source from the load the voltage source only charges the capacitor the impulse current from the voltage source itself is negligible The switch is then closed to deliver an impulse from the capacitor to the load through a pulse forming network which consists of a rise time shaping inductor L r displaystyle L r nbsp two impulse duration shaping resistors R s 1 displaystyle R s1 nbsp and R s 2 displaystyle R s2 nbsp and an impedance matching resistor R m displaystyle R m nbsp The standard does not specify component values or practical circuits any suitable design that conforms to the standard requirements can be used A complete circuit analysis of the ideal surge generator including design equations and component values is available in the presentation Introduction To Voltage Surge Immunity Testing by Hesterman et al 8 An updated derivation for the Third Edition is given in the paper Elementary and ideal equivalent circuit model of the 1 2 50 8 20 ms combination wave generator by Carobbi et al 7 Design Equations edit The following design equations are derived by Carobbi et al In these equations the charging voltage is E displaystyle E nbsp and the components are C C c displaystyle C C c nbsp R 1 R s 1 displaystyle R 1 R s1 nbsp R 2 R m displaystyle R 2 R m nbsp R 3 R s 2 displaystyle R 3 R s2 nbsp and L L r displaystyle L L r nbsp 7 Open Circuit Voltage edit For open circuit voltage its Laplace transform is V s E R 3 L s 2 s a b a b displaystyle V s frac E cdot frac R 3 L s 2 s alpha beta alpha beta nbsp 1 Where a b R 2 R 3 L 1 R 1 C displaystyle alpha beta frac R 2 R 3 L frac 1 R 1 C nbsp 2 a b R 1 R 2 R 3 R 1 L C displaystyle alpha beta frac R 1 R 2 R 3 R 1 LC nbsp 3 Thus open circuit voltage is a double exponential waveform v t E R 3 L b a e a t e b t displaystyle v t frac E cdot frac R 3 L beta alpha e alpha t e beta t nbsp 4 The voltage reaches its peak value at t p e ln b a b a displaystyle t pe frac ln beta alpha beta alpha nbsp 5 And the peak voltage is V p E R 3 L b a e a t p e e b t p e displaystyle V p frac E cdot frac R 3 L beta alpha e alpha t pe e beta t pe nbsp 6 Short Circuit Current edit When the output is shorted note that the last resistor R 3 displaystyle R 3 nbsp R s 2 displaystyle R s2 nbsp in the schematic is effectively removed For short circuit current its Laplace transform is I s E L s w 0 2 Q 2 w n 2 displaystyle I s frac frac E L left s frac omega 0 2Q right 2 omega n 2 nbsp 7 Where w 0 2 R 1 R 2 L C R 1 displaystyle omega 0 2 frac R 1 R 2 LCR 1 nbsp 8 w 0 Q R 2 L 1 R 1 C displaystyle frac w 0 Q frac R 2 L frac 1 R 1 C nbsp 9 w n w 0 1 1 2 Q 2 displaystyle omega n omega 0 sqrt 1 1 2Q 2 nbsp 10 Thus short circuit current is a damped sine wave from an underdamped RLC circuit i t E w n L e w 0 2 Q t sin w n t displaystyle i t frac E omega n L e frac omega 0 2Q t sin omega n t nbsp 11 The current reaches its peak value at t p s 1 w n arctan 2 Q 2 1 displaystyle t ps frac 1 omega n arctan left sqrt 2Q 2 1 right nbsp 12 And the peak current is I p E w 0 L e w 0 2 Q t p s displaystyle I p frac E omega 0 L e frac omega 0 2Q t ps nbsp 13 Solution edit Ignore the amplitude in 4 it becomes v t e a t e b t displaystyle v t e alpha t e beta t nbsp 14 By substituting x a t displaystyle x alpha t nbsp y x e x e b a x displaystyle y x e x e frac beta alpha x nbsp 15 The ratio b a displaystyle frac beta alpha nbsp should be selected to make y x displaystyle y x nbsp s waveform have a duration over front time ratio of 50 1 2 41 7 displaystyle 50 1 2 approx 41 7 nbsp By numerically evaluating y x displaystyle y x nbsp s waveform including its front time and duration while varying this ratio the solution is found to be b a 168 displaystyle frac beta alpha 168 nbsp Next a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp are computed by numerically varying a displaystyle alpha nbsp until 14 s waveform has a front time of 1 2 ms The solution is a 1 displaystyle alpha 1 nbsp 68 2 ms Therefore b 1 displaystyle beta 1 nbsp 0 4 ms Ignore the amplitude in 11 it becomes i t e w 0 2 Q t sin w n t displaystyle i t e frac omega 0 2Q t sin omega n t nbsp 16 By substituting z w 0 t displaystyle z omega 0 t nbsp y z e z 2 Q sin 1 1 2 Q 2 z displaystyle y z e frac z 2Q sin left sqrt 1 1 2Q 2 z right nbsp 17 The value Q displaystyle Q nbsp should be selected to make y z displaystyle y z nbsp s waveform have a duration over front time ratio of 20 8 2 5 displaystyle 20 8 2 5 nbsp By numerically evaluating y z displaystyle y z nbsp s waveform including its front time and duration while varying Q displaystyle Q nbsp the solution is found to be Q 1 46 displaystyle Q 1 46 nbsp Next w 0 displaystyle omega 0 nbsp is computed by varying it numerically until 16 s waveform has a duration of 20 ms With the correct duration front time is also automatically satisfied The solution is w 0 2 p f 0 20 03 kHz displaystyle frac omega 0 2 pi f 0 20 03 text kHz nbsp Once a displaystyle alpha nbsp b displaystyle beta nbsp w 0 displaystyle omega 0 nbsp and Q displaystyle Q nbsp are solved the circuit component values can be obtained R 3 displaystyle R 3 nbsp is derived first Note that the effective output impedance is by dividing 6 by 13 R V p I p w 0 b a e a t p e e b t p e e w 0 2 Q t p s R 3 displaystyle R frac V p I p frac omega 0 beta alpha e alpha t pe e beta t pe e frac omega 0 2Q t ps R 3 nbsp 18 And can be rearranged as R 3 b a e w 0 2 Q t p s w 0 e a t p e e b t p e R displaystyle R 3 frac beta alpha e frac omega 0 2Q t ps omega 0 e alpha t pe e beta t pe R nbsp 19 Set output impedance R displaystyle R nbsp 2 W the solution is R 3 displaystyle R 3 nbsp 26 1 W Finally the closed form solution of other component values is L R 3 a b w 0 Q displaystyle L frac R 3 alpha beta omega 0 Q nbsp 20 R 2 w 0 Q a b w 0 2 a b w 0 Q L displaystyle R 2 left frac omega 0 Q frac alpha beta omega 0 2 alpha beta omega 0 Q right L nbsp 21 R 1 w 0 2 a b w 0 2 R 3 R 2 displaystyle R 1 frac omega 0 2 alpha beta omega 0 2 R 3 R 2 nbsp 22 C 1 R 1 a b w 0 Q a b w 0 2 displaystyle C frac 1 R 1 frac alpha beta omega 0 Q alpha beta omega 0 2 nbsp 23 The solution is C displaystyle C nbsp 5 93 mF L displaystyle L nbsp 10 9 mH R 1 displaystyle R 1 nbsp 20 2 W and R 2 displaystyle R 2 nbsp 0 814 W Output peak voltage is slightly lower than the charging voltage To scale the voltage use the amplitude in 4 and set E 1 this yields 1 R 3 L b a 0 943 displaystyle frac 1 cdot frac R 3 L beta alpha 0 943 nbsp Thus the capacitor charging voltage is 1 0 943 1 06 displaystyle frac 1 0 943 1 06 nbsp times the output peak voltage Note that this solution doesn t consider the coupling capacitor and also has an undershoot of e p 2 Q 0 34 displaystyle e frac pi 2Q 0 34 nbsp The solution to both problems are discussed in the following sections Coupling Capacitor edit An extra 18 mF series coupling capacitor has almost no effect on the open circuit voltage but affects short circuit current significantly Carobbi et al suggested the following iterative trial and error design procedure to take the effect of the series coupling capacitor into account First without considering the capacitor the original circuit analysis is reused and circuit components values are obtained through a numerical solver Next the capacitor is added and the change of short circuit waveform is noted Then the target waveform parameters for the numerical solver are pre distorted obtaining a new set of component values by changing front time duration and effective output impedance For example if the peak current becomes too low component values are recalculated for a higher peak current by adjusting the effective output impedance target These steps are repeated until the desired waveform is obtained The result given here is accurate within 1 5 after two iterations more iterations are required for higher accuracy 7 Results edit Ideal Component Values Numerical Approximation 18 mF SeriesCapacitor ChargingVoltage V C c displaystyle C c nbsp mF L r displaystyle L r nbsp mH R m displaystyle R m nbsp W R s 1 displaystyle R s1 nbsp W R s 2 displaystyle R s2 nbsp W CurrentUndershoot By No 1060 5 93 10 9 0 814 20 2 26 1 34 Carobbi et al 7 No 1082 6 04 10 4 0 941 25 1 19 8 27 4 Hesterman et al 8 Yes 1063 9 98 10 7 0 832 9 39 25 5 39 Carobbi et al 7 Both sources showed that it s not possible to exactly meet the waveform requirements without violating the 30 short circuit current overshoot limit Nevertheless Hesterman et al presented an approximate solution by adjusting the waveform parameters within tolerance 8 The derivation by Carobbi et al ignored the undershoot requirement pointing out that a practical circuit may reduce overshoot to even practically zero in some cases if an unidirectional switch is used 7 Also IEC 61000 4 5 states that there s no overshoot or undershoot requirement at the output of a coupling network These solutions are only valid for an ideal generator suitable for circuit simulation It can be used as a starting point of practical generator design but component values have to be adjusted further due to switch non idealities In an ideal circuit open circuit voltage rise time is governed by the time constant L r R m R 3 displaystyle frac L r R m R 3 nbsp but a practical switch may cause rise time degradation Further due to the use of different switch types a real generator may produce either a bidirectional impulse with undershoot or an unidirectional impulse without undershoot An ideal circuit model cannot predict these non linear effects and should not be treated as a complete circuit model of practical generators 7 10 700 5 320 ms Generator edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2022 A different Combination Wave Generator is used for the 10 700 5 320 ms surge nbsp Simplified Schematic of the 10 700 5 320 ms Combination Wave GeneratorTest Levels editThe following table shows the peak open circuit voltage and short circuit current of the Combination Wave Generator Electrical Surge Test Levels IEC EN 61000 4 5 Class Test Level V Max Peak Current 2 W A 1 500 250 2 1000 500 3 2000 1000 4 4000 2000 X Special Special X can be any level specified in product specific standards It can be above below or between the others The full current is not always actually applied to the DUT Depending on the test setup and port type an additional resistor may be used as a part of the coupling network to reduce the peak surge current into the DUT raising the output impedance to 12 W or 42 W See also editIEC 61000 4 2 IEC 61000 4 4 Surge protection List of common EMC test standards List of IEC standards List of EN standardsReferences edit IEC 61000 4 5 2014 AMD1 2017 CSV Consolidated version Electromagnetic compatibility EMC Part 4 5 Testing and measurement techniques Surge immunity test webstore iec ch International Electrotechnical Commission 2017 a b c d Richman Peter 1983 Single Output Voltage and Current Surge Generation for Testing Electronic Systems 1983 IEEE International Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility IEEE a b Niechcial Frank 2020 Technical Note 0107 Burst and Surge Summary of Changes to the Standard PDF Technical report Ametek CTS GmbH a b c IEC 61000 4 5 第3版 改訂発行の対応とその改訂詳細について PDF Technical report in Japanese NoiseKen 2014 05 29 a b Rowe Martin 2011 12 16 Standards define test impulses mostly EDN G P Fotis I F Gonos I A Stathopulos 2004 Simulation and Experiment for Surge Immunity According to EN 61000 4 5 PDF Technical report National Technical University of Athens a b c d e f g h i Carlo F M Carobbi Alessio Bonci 2013 Elementary and ideal equivalent circuit model of the 1 2 50 8 20 ms combination wave generator IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility Magazine 2 4 IEEE 51 57 doi 10 1109 MEMC 2013 6714698 S2CID 44247646 a b c Hesterman Bryce Powell Douglas 2007 09 18 Introduction To Voltage Surge Immunity Testing PDF IEEE Power Electronics Society Denver Chapter Meeting External links editIEC Webstore IEC 61000 4 5 at International Electrotechnical Commission STMicroelectronics Application note AN4275 IEC 61000 4 5 standard overview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title IEC 61000 4 5 amp oldid 1203541073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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