Method To Reduce Inrush Currents In A Transformer-Less Rectifier Uninterruptible Power Supply System
US-2017244277-A1 · Aug 24, 2017 · US
US9543756B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9543756-B2 |
| Application number | US-201313893549-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | May 14, 2013 |
| Priority date | May 15, 2012 |
| Publication date | Jan 10, 2017 |
| Grant date | Jan 10, 2017 |
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A pulse generator circuit arrangement for the search for insulation faults in IT networks includes a rectifier circuit for transforming an IT network voltage into a DC intermediate circuit and switching elements having a trigger signal input for switching on and off a DC intermediate circuit voltage. A circuit device downstream of the switching elements generates a pulsed current to be supplied to the IT network. The circuit arrangement includes a control and evaluating logic for determining the insulation resistance of the IT network and also a circuit device for generating the pulsed current, which is formed as a current regulating device and allows a dynamic adjustment of the pulsed current depending on the determined insulation resistance.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A pulse generator circuit arrangement for insulation fault location in IT networks, said circuit arrangement comprising: a rectifier circuit transforming an IT network voltage into a DC intermediate circuit; switching elements having a trigger signal input for switching on and off a voltage of the DC intermediate circuit; a circuit device downstream of the switching elements generating a pulsed current to be supplied to the IT network; control and evaluating logic determining an insulation resistance of the IT network; and said circuit device generating the pulsed current, which is formed as a current regulating device which allows a dynamic adaptive adjustment of the pulsed current depending on the simultaneously determined insulation resistance. 2. A circuit arrangement according to claim 1 , in which for the dynamic adjustment of the pulsed current, the current regulating device has a regulating logic which is connected on an input side to a current measuring device for determining an actual current value of the IT network and also to the control and evaluating logic for including a target current value derived from the insulation resistance and which on an output side provides a correcting value which changes the actual current value via an actuator so that on the output of the actuator an adjusted output current value occurs. 3. A circuit arrangement according to claim 1 , in which the control and evaluating logic for determining an ohmic part of the insulation resistance is connected on an input side to a correcting value output of the regulating logic and to a voltage measuring device for measuring the IT network voltage and on an output side it passes on a target current value to the regulating logic and an internal trigger signal to the switching elements for switching on and off the DC intermediate circuit voltage. 4. A circuit arrangement according to claim 1 , in which the control and evaluating logic has inputs for an externally supplied target system value of the pulsed current and for an externally supplied system-wide trigger signal for the pulsed current sequence. 5. A circuit arrangement according claim 1 , including a power supply unit which, using an external supply voltage from another power supply network, supplies a galvanically isolated DC voltage into the DC intermediate circuit. 6. A method for generating pulsed signals for insulation fault location in IT networks, comprising the signal processing steps: transforming an IT network voltage into a DC intermediate circuit using a rectifier circuit; switching on and off of a DC intermediate circuit voltage using switching elements having a trigger signal input; generating a pulsed current to be supplied to the IT network; determining insulation resistance of the IT network using control and evaluating logic; and generating the pulsed current supplied to the IT network using a current regulating device in such a manner that a dynamic adaptive adjustment of the pulsed current takes place depending on the simultaneous determined insulation resistance. 7. A method according to claim 6 , in which the current regulation for the dynamic adjustment of the pulsed current takes place using a regulating logic which calculates a correcting value from an actual current value of the IT network supplied by a current measuring device and from a target current value depending on an insulation resistance supplied by the control and evaluating logic, the correcting value changing the actual current value via an actuator so that on the output of the actuator an adjusted output current value occurs. 8. A method according to claim 6 , in which for determining an ohmic part of the insulation resistance, the correcting value supplied by the regulating logic and the IT network voltage provided by the voltage measuring device are used as input values in the control and evaluating logic, wherein the control and evaluating logic passes on the target current value to the regulating logic, the target current being variable depending on the determined insulation resistance. 9. A method according to claim 6 , in which the dynamic adjustment of the pulsed current takes place according to one or more of the criteria a) optimization of the operating range of the actuator, b) correcting value in a range which allows a determination as exact as possible of the insulation resistance, c) minimization of the power dissipation of the actuator. 10. A method according to claim 6 , in which the pulsed current has a pulse-shaped, alternating flow. 11. A method according to claim 6 , in which when the IT network to be monitored is shut down, a galvanically isolated DC voltage is supplied to the DC intermediate circuit by means of an external supply voltage from another power supply network.
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