Arc fault circuit detection methods, systems, and apparatus including delay
US-8929036-B2 · Jan 6, 2015 · US
US9876344B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9876344-B2 |
| Application number | US-201514729325-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 3, 2015 |
| Priority date | Nov 17, 2014 |
| Publication date | Jan 23, 2018 |
| Grant date | Jan 23, 2018 |
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An electronic circuit breaker may include a monitoring circuit configured to monitor and respond to a power supply and/or detection circuit failure within the electronic circuit breaker. In some embodiments, the monitoring circuit may monitor a regulated DC voltage provided by the detection circuit within the electronic circuit breaker. A response to a power supply and/or detection circuit failure may include interrupting current flow between an electrical power source and an electrical circuit protected by the electronic circuit breaker. Methods of monitoring and responding to a power supply and/or detection circuit failure within an electronic circuit breaker are also provided, as are other aspects.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. An electronic circuit breaker, comprising: a trip switch configured to open and close a current path between an electrical power source and an electrical circuit; a detection circuit configured to detect and respond to a fault condition in the electrical circuit, the detection circuit configured to respond to a fault condition by causing the trip switch to open the current path between the electrical power source and the electrical circuit; a power supply configured to convert an AC voltage received from the electrical power source into a first DC voltage, the power supply providing the first DC voltage to the detection circuit; and a monitoring circuit coupled to receive and monitor a second DC voltage from the detection circuit, wherein the monitoring circuit is configured to respond to a power supply or detection circuit failure within the electronic circuit breaker by causing the trip switch to open the current path between the electrical power source and the electrical circuit, and wherein a predetermined voltage level of the second DC voltage indicates no failure of the power supply or detection circuit. 2. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the second DC voltage is derived from the first DC voltage within the electronic circuit breaker. 3. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the second DC voltage is provided at an output of the detection circuit and is a regulated DC voltage. 4. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the monitoring circuit is configured to respond to a drop in the first or second DC voltage below the predetermined voltage level by causing the trip switch to open the current path between the electrical power source and the electrical circuit. 5. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 wherein the monitoring circuit comprises: a first pin electrically coupled to receive an AC voltage from the electrical power source; a second pin electrically coupled to receive the first DC voltage or the second DC voltage; and a third pin electrically coupled to a control circuit to cause the trip switch to open the current path between the electrical power source and the electrical circuit. 6. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the monitoring circuit comprises a transistor configured to shunt a current to ground while the second DC voltage remains above the predetermined voltage level. 7. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the monitoring circuit is fabricated as an integrated circuit. 8. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 , wherein the detection circuit is configured to detect a fault condition comprising at least one of a ground fault, an arc fault, an over current condition, and a short circuit condition. 9. The electronic circuit breaker of claim 1 wherein an application specific integrated circuit comprises the detection circuit, the detection circuit comprising a DC voltage or shunt regulator. 10. A method of assembling an electronic circuit breaker configured to monitor and respond to a power supply and/or a detection circuit failure within the electronic circuit breaker, the method comprising: electrically coupling a trip switch between a source terminal and a load terminal, the trip switch configured to open and close a current path in a power conductor between the source terminal and the load terminal; electrically coupling an input of a power supply to the power conductor, the power supply configured to convert an AC voltage into a first DC voltage and comprising a first DC voltage output; electrically coupling a detection circuit to the first DC voltage output, the detection circuit comprising a second DC voltage output; and electrically coupling a monitoring circuit to the power supply input and to the second DC voltage output, wherein the monitoring circuit is configured to respond to a power supply or detection circuit failure by causing the trip switch to open the current path between the source terminal and the load terminal, and wherein a predetermined voltage level at the second DC voltage output indicates no failure of the power supply or detection circuit. 11. The method of claim 10 further comprising electrically coupling the monitoring circuit to a control circuit configured to control the opening and closing of the trip switch. 12. The method of claim 10 further comprising electrically coupling a control circuit to the trip switch, the detection circuit, and the monitoring circuit, wherein the control circuit is configured to control the opening and closing of the trip switch. 13. The method of claim 12 wherein the control circuit comprises an SCR (silicon-controlled rectifier) or a TRIAC. 14. The method of claim 10 wherein the monitoring circuit is configured to monitor a DC voltage provided at the second DC voltage output of the detection circuit and to respond to a drop in the DC voltage below the predetermined voltage level by causing the trip switch to open the current path between the source terminal and the load terminal. 15. The method of claim 10 , wherein the electrically coupling a monitoring circuit comprises: electrically coupling a first pin of the monitoring circuit to the power supply input; electrically coupling a second pin of the monitoring circuit to the second DC voltage output of the detection circuit; and electrically coupling a third pin of the monitoring circuit to a control circuit configured to control the opening and closing of the trip switch. 16. A method of detecting and responding to a power supply and/or a detection circuit failure within an electronic circuit breaker, the method comprising: monitoring a DC voltage received from a detection circuit within the electronic circuit breaker, the detection circuit operable to detect at least one of a ground fault or an arc fault, and a predetermined voltage level of the DC voltage indicates no failure of the power supply or detection circuit; and responding to a drop in the DC voltage below the predetermined voltage level by causing a trip switch to open a current path between a source terminal and a load terminal of the electronic circuit breaker. 17. The method of claim 16 further comprising shunting a current to ground while the DC voltage remains above the predetermined voltage level. 18. The method of claim 16 wherein the monitoring a DC voltage comprises monitoring a regulated DC voltage provided at an output of a detection circuit within the electronic circuit breaker. 19. The method of claim 16 wherein the responding to a drop in the DC voltage comprises: turning off a transistor electrically coupled to receive the DC voltage; diverting a current to a control circuit; energizing a trip solenoid or electromagnet; and opening the trip switch to open the current path between the source terminal and the load terminal of the electronic circuit breaker. 20. The method of claim 19 wherein the diverting a current to a control circuit comprises diverting the current to an SCR (silicon-controlled rectifier) or a TRIAC to turn on the SCR or TRIAC.
Checking correct functioning of protective arrangements, e.g. by simulating a fault (for differential current circuit breakers H02H3/335) · CPC title
Apparatus or processes for the manufacture of emergency protective devices · CPC title
Circuit arrangements not adapted to a particular application of the switching device and for which no provision exists elsewhere · CPC title
operated by earth fault currents (H01H83/14 takes precedence) · CPC title
responsive to fault current to earth, frame or mass (with balanced or differential arrangement H02H3/26 {; monitoring earth connection H02H5/105}) · CPC title
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