Electronic circuit and low voltage arc flash system including an electromagnetic trigger

US9570901B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9570901-B2
Application numberUS-201414181929-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateFeb 17, 2014
Priority dateFeb 17, 2014
Publication dateFeb 14, 2017
Grant dateFeb 14, 2017

How to read this patent

A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.

  1. Title

    What the patent document calls the invention.

  2. Abstract

    A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.

  3. Assignees and inventors

    Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.

  4. Key dates

    Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.

  5. First independent claim

    The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.

  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

    Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.

Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An electronic circuit includes a number of sensors structured to detect an arc flash from an uncontrolled arcing fault, and a trigger circuit, responsive to the detected arc flash, structured to trigger a triggering mechanism and cause a breakdown of a number of gaps within a low voltage arc flash switch.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An electronic circuit comprising: a number of sensors structured to detect an arc flash from an uncontrolled arcing fault; and a trigger circuit, responsive to the detected arc flash, structured to trigger a triggering mechanism and cause a breakdown of a number of gaps within a low voltage arc flash switch, wherein said triggering mechanism is an expandable electromagnetic trigger. 2. The electronic circuit of claim 1 wherein said number of sensors are a plurality of sensors including a number of optical sensors and a number of current sensors. 3. The electronic circuit of claim 1 wherein said number of gaps are a plurality of gaps including a first gap and a second gap; wherein said expandable electromagnetic trigger is a conductive ribbon or foil including a first plurality of folds disposable within said first gap and a second plurality of folds disposable within said second gap; wherein each of said first plurality of folds and said second plurality of folds has a compressed position before said conductive ribbon or foil is triggered by said trigger circuit; and wherein each of said first plurality of folds and said second plurality of folds has a triggered position after said conductive ribbon or foil is triggered by said trigger circuit, said triggered position causing the first plurality of folds to expand and breakdown said first gap and the second plurality of folds to expand and breakdown said second gap. 4. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein said breakdown said first gap and said breakdown said second gap occur in about 800 microseconds. 5. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein said conductive ribbon is made of copper and has a width of about 0.1 inch, a thickness of about 0.003 inch and a height of about 0.325 inch. 6. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein each one of both of: said first plurality of folds and said second plurality of folds comprises twelve folds. 7. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein each one of both of said first plurality of folds and said second plurality of folds forms an accordion shape. 8. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein said trigger circuit outputs a current pulse to said conductive ribbon or foil; wherein current flowing through each of said first plurality of folds and said second plurality of folds causes the first plurality of folds to electromagnetically repel each other and causes the second plurality of folds to electromagnetically repel each other, thereby causing said conductive ribbon or foil to move from the compressed position to the triggered position. 9. The electronic circuit of claim 3 wherein each of said number of gaps is formed by a first electrode separated from a second electrode; wherein said triggering mechanism comprises for each of said number of gaps a U-shaped foil or ribbon conductor including a first end, a first elongated portion, a U-bend, a second elongated portion, an arcuate bend and a second end; wherein said second end is electrically connected to the first electrode; wherein said first elongated portion is parallel to said second elongated portion and separated therefrom by a first insulator; wherein said second elongated portion is parallel to said first electrode and separated therefrom by a second insulator; wherein said triggering mechanism has a compressed position before said triggering mechanism is triggered by said trigger circuit; wherein said triggering mechanism has a triggered position after said triggering mechanism is triggered by said trigger circuit; wherein said first end and said first elongated portion are distal from the second electrode in the compressed position; and wherein said first elongated portion electrically engages the second electrode in the triggered position. 10. The electronic circuit of claim 9 wherein said U-shaped foil or ribbon conductor is made of copper having a thickness of about 0.003 inch. 11. The electronic circuit of claim 9 wherein said trigger circuit outputs a current pulse to said U-shaped foil or ribbon conductor; wherein current flowing in opposite directions through the first electrode and the first elongated portion and through the first elongated portion and the second elongated portion causes the first electrode to electromagnetically repel the first elongated portion and causes the first elongated portion to electromagnetically repel the second elongated portion. 12. An electronic circuit comprising: a number of sensors structured to detect an arc flash from an uncontrolled arcing fault; and a trigger circuit, responsive to the detected arc flash, structured to trigger a triggering mechanism and cause a breakdown of a number of gaps within a low voltage arc flash switch, wherein each of said number of gaps is formed by a first electrode separated from a second electrode, wherein said triggering mechanism comprises for each of said number of gaps a foil or ribbon conductor including a first end electrically connected to the first electrode, an elongated portion and a free second end, with a notch formed in the elongated portion proximate the free second end, wherein said elongated portion is parallel to said first electrode and separated therefrom by an insulator in a non-triggered position, wherein said triggering mechanism has a first position parallel to the first electrode before said triggering mechanism is triggered by said trigger circuit, wherein said triggering mechanism has a triggered position after said triggering mechanism is triggered by said trigger circuit, wherein said foil or ribbon conductor is distal from the second electrode in the non-triggered position, and wherein said elongated portion electrically engages the second electrode in the triggered position. 13. The electronic circuit of claim 12 wherein said trigger circuit outputs a current pulse to or from the free second end and from or to, respectively, the first electrode; wherein current flowing in opposite directions through the elongated portion and the first electrode causes the first electrode to electromagnetically repel the elongated portion, break the elongated portion at the notch and cause the elongated portion to electrically engage the second electrode in the triggered position. 14. The electronic circuit of claim 12 wherein said number of gaps is two gaps; wherein said triggering mechanism comprises for each of said two gaps a triggering member; and wherein said trigger circuit outputs a current pulse in parallel to the trigger member for each of said two gaps. 15. An electronic circuit comprising: a number of sensors structured to detect an arc flash from an uncontrolled arcing fault; and a trigger circuit, responsive to the detected arc flash, structured to trigger a triggering mechanism and cause a breakdown of a number of gaps within a low voltage arc flash switch, wherein said number of sensors comprises a current sensor, and wherein said trigger circuit comprises: a full-wave bridge including an output and an input electrically connected to the current sensor, a capacitor electrically connected to the output of the current sensor, and an electronic circuit structured to respond to a predetermined voltage across said capacitor and output a current pulse through said triggering mechanism. 16. The electronic circuit of claim 15 wherein said current sensor is structured to charge said capacitor at a charge rate of about 2 kV/ms; wherein said predetermined voltage is about 2 kV; and wherein said capacitor is charged to the predetermined voltage in about 1 ms. 17. The electronic circuit of claim 16 whe

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Adjusting only the electromagnetic mechanism · CPC title

  • H02H1/0023Primary

    sensing non electrical parameters, e.g. by optical, pneumatic, thermal or sonic sensors · CPC title

  • H01T2/02Primary

    comprising a trigger electrode or an auxiliary spark gap · CPC title

  • using exploding wires or spark gaps (H05H1/26 takes precedence) · CPC title

  • Using arc detectors · CPC title

Patent family

Related publications grouped by family.

External sources

Frequently asked questions

Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.

What does patent US9570901B2 cover?
An electronic circuit includes a number of sensors structured to detect an arc flash from an uncontrolled arcing fault, and a trigger circuit, responsive to the detected arc flash, structured to trigger a triggering mechanism and cause a breakdown of a number of gaps within a low voltage arc flash switch.
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Eaton Corp
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification H02H1/0023. Mapped technology areas include Electricity.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Feb 14 2017 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).