PRESENTATION
ON
APPLICATIONS OF POWER
ELECTRONIC CIRCUIT
SUBMITTED BY
Er.G.P.MISHRA
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Power Electronic Systems�Power electronics refers to control and conversion of electrical power by power semiconductor devices wherein these devices operate as switches. Advent of silicon-controlled rectifiers, abbreviated as SCRs, led to the development of a new field of application called the power electronics. Before SCRs, mercury-arc rectifiers were used for controlling electrical power, but such rectifier circuits were part of industrial electronics and the scope for applications of mercury-arc rectifiers was limited. The application spread to many fields such as drives, power supplies, aviation electronics, high frequency inverters and power electronics. �
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Interdisciplinary Nature of Power Electronics
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Applications
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Tasks of Power Electronics�
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Example
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Converters�Electronic power converter is the term that is used to refer to a power electronic circuit that converts voltage and current from one form to another.
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Rectifiers�Rectifiers may be classified as uncontrolled and controlled rectifiers. Controlled rectifiers can be further divided into semi-controlled and fully-controlled rectifiers. Uncontrolled rectifier circuits are built with diodes, and fully-controlled rectifier circuits are built with SCRs. �Both diodes and SCRs are used in semi-controlled rectifier circuits.
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DC to AC Conversion�The converter that changes a DC to AC is called an inverter. Earlier inverters were built with SCRs. Since the circuitry required to turn the SCR off tends to be complex, other power semiconductor devices such as bipolar junction transistors, power MOSFETs, insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBT) and MOS-controlled thyristors (MCTs) are used nowadays. Currently only the inverters with a high power rating, such as 500 kW or higher.
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DC to DC Conversion�When the SCR came into use, a dc-to-dc converter circuit was called a chopper. Nowadays, an SCR is rarely used in a dc-to-dc converter. Either a power BJT or a power MOSFET is normally used in such a converter and this converter is called a switch-mode power supply.
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AC to AC Converter
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Applications of Power Electronics
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Automobile’s Ignition System
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Hybrid Cars
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Diodes
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Zener Diodes
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Silicon Controlled Rectifiers�The basic purpose of the SCR is to function as a switch that can turn on or off small or large amounts of power. It performs this function with no moving parts that wear out and no points that require replacing. There can be a tremendous power gain in the SCR; in some units a very small triggering current is able to switch several hundred amperes without exceeding its rated abilities. The SCR can often replace much slower and larger mechanical switches. �
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Motor Controllers
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AC to DC Conversion: Half-Wave Rectifier
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Full Wave Rectifier
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Figure 12.1
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Classification of Power Electronic Devices
The following is taken from Principles and Applications of Electrical Engineering by G. Rizzoni, McGraw Hill
Table 12.1
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Power Electric Circuits
Figure 12.2
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AC-DC Converter Circuit and Waveform
Figure 12.3
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AC-AC Converter Circuit and Waveform
Figure 12.4
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DC-DC Converter Circuit and Waveform
Figure 12.17, 12.18
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Rectifier Connected to an Inductive Load
Operation of a Freewheeling Diode
Figure 12.20, 12.21
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Three-Phase Diode Bridge Rectifier
Waveforms and Conduction Times of Three-Phase Bridge Rectifier
Figure 12.25, 12.26
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Controlled Rectifier Circuit
Half-Wave Controlled Rectifier Waveforms
Figure 12.34, 12.35
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DC Motor
Step-Down Chopper (Buck Converter)