40A
Power Supply Unit
An article by Ben Spencer, G4YNM
(RADIO
COMMUNICATION April 1996)
SPECIFICATION
· Input voltage: 240
·
Output
voltage: 13.2V DC
·
Output
current: 40A DC
·
Over
current protection: current limiting al 40A
·
Short circuit
protection: Regulator shut off.
·
Over
voltage protection: Shuts off DC input and discharges input stage reservoir.
·
Over
temperature protection: Fan automatically operates as heat sink temperature of 65°C.
·
Indicators:
Power ON LED and
Short circuit Protection active LED.
THIS
PROJECT describes a Protected 13.2V 40A Power Supply Unit which, provided the
heat sinking and cooling fan are suitable, is capable of running at full power
at 100% duty cycle. It features soft starting, over voltage, current limiting,
short circuit protection and automatic fan control. It is a substantial project
that is not for the novice constructor.
CIRCUIT
DESCRIPTION
THE
HEAVY CURRENT carrying connections are shown in bold in Fig 1. The mains input
passes through an EMC filter, protection fuse F1 and ON/OFF switch S 1 to
transformer TI. The secondary output of TI is rectified by D I but cannot pass
through open relay contacts RL1a. To start the PSU switch, S2 is operated
allowing limited current to pass via R1 to slowly charge the reservoir capacitor
C1. As C1 charges, the RL1 a pulls in closing the relay contacts and shorting
out R1 and S2 placing the PSU in the ON state.
Voltage regulator IC1 is the popular 723. A 7.2V reference on IC 1:6 is fed to non-inverting ICI:5. This is compared with a sample of the PSU output voltage via RI3, RI4 and R15 to inverting input at ICI:4. The 723 can source 150mA at ICl:10, so transistor TR2 acts as a Darlington driver for the pass transistors TR3 to TR7 inclusive. Resistors R21 to R25 are current sharing resistors and the voltage across them is proportional to the current drawn by the PSU load.
When the current through R21 reaches 8A (i.e. a total PSU current output of 40A) the voltage across R11 and R12 is 0.88V and is tapped from R I I to bias a transistor inside IC1 which robs IC1: 10 of some current, forcing the PSU into a current limiting mode.
Fig
1: The circuit diagram of the complete 40A Power Supply Unit.
If
the PSU load is such that the current limited output voltage falls to about 6V
(i.e., a short circuit) diode DS I becomes forward
biased and switches IC1's internal transistor on, robbing ICl:10 of all
current and shutting the regulator down. This prevents a short circuit across
the output wrecking TR3 to TR7. Diode DS1 lights up to warn of the fault. If the
short circuit is removed, the 9.1V set up by R7 and D2 reverse biases IC1s
internal transistor emitter and the PSU output will return lo 13.2V.
Terminals
+S and -S are for remote sensing, where the PSU might be located some distance
from the equipment it is powering and a voltage drop occurs along the equipment
DC power leads (Fig 2). The remote sense terminals draw very little current and
are used purely to measure the voltage at the load. If the delivered voltage is
below 13.2V, the PSU will increase the voltage at the output terminals to make
up for the drop along the equipment leads so that exactly 13.2V is delivered to
the load. If remote sensing is not used then shorting links must be connected
across the PSU output terminals. Resistors R18 and R20 are included for
forgetful operators.
Fig
2: Using remote sensing.
Over
voltage is only likely to occur if one of TR3 to TR7 fails short circuit. Over
voltage protection is provided by D5, R16, R17 and SCR1. If the PSU output
increases above 15V (at the load) then D5 conducts and fires thyristor SCR1.
When SCRI fires, it short-circuits the unregulated input discharging C1 via R3
and causing relay RL1 to drop out. When the relay drops out it prevents
capacitor C1 from being recharged (in the next rectified half cycle and the PSU
is latched in the OFF state.
A
PSU of this category will develop a fair amount of heat in TR3 to TR7; roughly
350W at 13.2V 40A output and this must be transferred to the environment via
suitable heat sinks. Previously published designs have either had a fan that
continuously runs (which after prolonged periods becomes intensely irritating}
or one that must be switched on by the operator requiring the operator to
periodically test heat sink temperature (scorched fingers). Other designs simply
shut the PSU down until it has cooled, which is pretty user unfriendly if you
happen to be working it rare DX station. This design overcomes both of these
problems by using it simple but effective auto-matte fan controller,
A
4.7V reference is set up by R5 and D2. Bead thermistor RT1 is thermally coupled
to a hot spot on one of the heat sinks tie, on top of TR3). At Low ambient
temperatures the thermistor has a high resistance and TR1 is switched off. Under
heavy usage the PSU heat sink warms up and so does thermistor RT1.
As 65°C the thermistor value has dropped sufficiently for R6 to develop 0.65V and switch on TR1 driving the DC fan, blowing cooling air over the heat sinks. As the heat sink cools so does RT1 and at 55°C the reverse process occurs and the fan is switched off. Switching is gradual with the result that the PSU is not tripped out by the fan operating and the fan runs for just long enough to cool the PSU down.
Fig3 Component Overlay with PCB track
The
PCB has one corner truncated at 45°, to aid component location &
identification. Refer to the component location diagram shown in Fig3a
with tracking shown in Fig 3b.
Use wires that is 8AWG, (10 SWG, 0.128in OD, 3mm OD) for all heavy-duty connections. Doubling up 2.5mm2 domestic ring main black & red will do. R4, shown in Fig1 (part1) not used. Fit thick wire link on PCB board. Resistor R2 and capacitor C2 are soldered directly across the solder tags for C1 with C1 bolted to the chassis with a clip. Relay RL1 is a 40A 24V truck relay or a 40A 12V car relay could be used and R42 included.
The two heat sinks (with transistors TR3 to TR7 & R21 to R25) arc fitted to the inside of the rear panel, sec Fig 4, along with the DC fan and mains IEC plug. Transistors TR3 to TR7 must be fitted with TO3 thermal washers and spigots. Use heat sink paste to give good thermal contact. Check that the collectors, emitters and bases of TR3 to TR7 are a very high resistance to ground (i.e., not short circuited).
Fig 3: (a) Component overlay and (b) PCB tracking [Enclosed].
The
cooling fan needs to be sufficiently large to cool the heat sinks under worst
case conditions, that is when drawing 40A and dropping 350W across the power
transistors. The easiest choice here is to fit the largest you can.
Transistor TR1 can sink up about 200mA.
The
PSU fan forces air into the PSU. After circulating around the inside of the case
the air is forced out of the rear panel through the areas marked CUT-OUT
(see Fig 4) at the base of the rear panel beneath the heat sinks. To duct the
air over the PSU heat sinks two home made heat sink covers are required.
These can be manufactured by folding either plastic or aluminum sheet at 90°.
The
cover is slid over the heat sink with the lower fold of the cover aligning with
the base of the PSU case. The two outer folds align with and are affixed to the
outer heat sink fins. The cover thus forms a vertical chimney preventing the air
escaping sideways or downwards.
If
using metal for the covers ensure that it doesn't short out the power
transistors.
Bead
thermistor RT1 has its leads cut to about 0.25in (6mm) and two flying leads
soldered. The soldered joints are then covered with heatshrink sleeving and the
bead is mounted on top of TR3 (or TR4 or TR5 etc). A small piece of expanded
polystyrene is then placed over the bead to prevent draughts from the fan
affecting it and a small home-brew metal clip is used to hold it in place.
The
PC pins on the PCB connect as follows:
1)
A to DSI anode (light duty).
2)
B to DS I cathode (light duty).
3)
C to TR3 emitter/R21 node (light duty).
4)
D to +OUT positive terminal (light duty).
5)
E to DS2 anode (light duty).
6)
F to TR2 base (light duty).
7)
G to +S remote sense terminal (light duty).
8)
H to DC fan positive (light duty).
9)
J to DC fan negative (light duty).
10)
K to DS2 cathode (light duty).
11)
L to C1 positive terminal (heavy duty).
12)
M to RLI coil positive (light duty).
13)
N to -OUT remote sense terminal (light duty).
14)
P to RL1 coil negative.
15)
TR to C1 negative terminal (heavy duty).
16)
R to CI negative terminal (heavy duty).
Fig
4: Rear panel details.
There are a few large copper areas on the PCB and it is advisable to
liberally apply solder over these regions. Finally, note that the PSU must not
be started under load. If you try to start it under load then you are likely to
burn out R1.
TEST
& CALIBRATION
CHECK
AND RECHECK your wiring; if you've made a mistake it might turn out to be more
frightening than yon would expect.
Set
R11 (current limit) fully clockwise and R14 (voltage) fully counter clockwise.
Apply the mains - there should not be any voltage at the output terminals. Press
and hold momentary action START switch S2 - after about five seconds the relay
should pull in and LED DS2 should light up. The output voltage will be below
13.2V - so adjust R 14 to obtain 13.2V output.
You
need to adjust R11 so that the PSU just goes into current limit mode when 40A is
being drawn. Ear this you require a 0.33W
variable resistor that can handle 550W. This might seem to be a problem but in
reality it's fairly easy to make a variable transistance using some 2N3055
transistors mounted on a heat sink as shown in Fig 6.
You will also need a 40A Ammeter or a smaller Ammeter and
shunt. Set the variable transistance to maximum resistance and connect it to the
PSU output. Adjust the variable transistance until exactly 40A is flowing
and then adjust R11 to the point where the PSU just about goes into current
limit mode, (i.e. the PSU output voltage just begins to fall). Remove the
variable transistance.
The
short circuit test involves connecting a substantial connector in line with your
40A Ammeter across the PSU outputs. The PSU output current should drop to just
about zero and DS1 (FAULT) LED should light up. Remove the connector and check
that DS1 goes out and the 13.2V output returns.
CONCLUSIONS
THE
MOST EXPENSIVE part of this project is the transformer; the cheapest place to
obtain one is from a rally. The transformer can be made up from two transformers
with secondaries of 15V at 25A. Make sure they are connected in the correct
phase. The secondary voltage must not be more than 18V RMS off load and not less
that 15V under full load.
Capacitor C1 can be made up by connecting two 47,000µF
capacitors in parallel or one 100,00µF. Diode D1 can be made from four 50A
diodes arranged in a bridge if a 50A bridge is not available as a complete
device. Likely sources for relay RL1 are commercial vehicle or truck dealership
Parts Departments or commercial vehicle repair works.
M1, in Fig 1, is a fan motor and not a meter as shown.
Fig
6: variable transistance.
COMPONENTS
LIST
Resistors
All
0.25W 5% unless otherwise noted
1
R1 |
10R
5W |
2
RI8, R20 |
10R |
4
R2, R5, R7, R8 |
1k |
1
R3 |
2R7
3W |
1
R4 |
See
text |
1
R6 |
220R |
3
R9, RI0, RI9 |
470R |
1
RI I |
100R |
3
R12, R16, R17 |
120R |
1
R13 |
5K6 |
1
R14 |
1k |
1
R15 |
6k8 |
5
R21,R22, R23, R24, R25 |
0R11
7W |
1
RTl |
4k7
Bead thermistor |
Capacitors
1
C1 |
94000uF
35V Electrolytic |
7
C2, C3, C4, C6, C7, C10, C11 |
10nF
50V Ceramic |
1
C5 |
luF
35V Electrolytic |
2
C8, C9 |
100uF
35V Electrolytic |
1
C12 |
100nF
50V Ceramic |
Semiconductors
1
D1 |
50A
50V PIV
Bridge rectifier |
1
D2 |
4V7
400mW Zener Diode |
1
D3 |
1N4148 Signal Diode |
1
D4 |
9V1
400mW
Zener diode |
1
D5 |
15V
400mW
Zener diode |
1
DS1 |
Red 5mm
LED |
1
DS2 |
Green 5mm LED |
1
TR1 |
BC184 NPN
|
6
TR2, TR3, TR4, TR5, TR6, TR7 |
2N3055 |
1
SCR1 |
13A Thyristor |
1
U1 |
LM723
Voltage Regulator |
Miscellaneous
1 |
50A binding post, red +OUT |
1 |
50A binding post, black, OUT |
1 |
5A binding post, red (Remote Sense positive) |
1 |
5A binding post, black(Remote Sense negative)
|
1 |
Fl Fuse 5A
|
1 |
Fuseholder, panel mount |
1 |
Fuseholder, rubber boot |
1 |
IEC mains Euro socket with integral EMI
filter block |
1 |
IEC socket rubber boot |
1 |
M1 24 VDC 0.2A maximum DC Axial Fan |
1 |
PCB |
1 |
Project case |
1 |
RL1 24 V DC 40A. Truck relay (or 12V 40A car relay
& R4) |
1 |
S1 ON/OFF SPST switch 240V 6A |
1 |
S2 START Momentary action switch
3A |
1 |
T1 Transformer 240/16V @ 50A 50Hz single winding primary, single winding secondary
specified at full load |
2 |
Heatsink, 1.2in C/W or better heat sinks capable of
holding 3 TO3 devices each |
1 |
Home-brew heatsink cover |
6 |
Feet for project case |
6 |
TO3 style thermal mounting kits
|
16 |
PC Pins |
|
Hook up wire |
|
Heatshrink sleeving
|
|
Heavy duty wire |
|
Metal gauze and filter for fan entry hole |
|
M3 Solder tags |
|
M3 spacers |
Last revised: apríla 16, 2007 07:23.