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INTRODUCTION
One of the most significant battles of the 19th century was fought not over land or resources but
to establish the type of electricity that powers our buildings.
At the very end of the 1800s, American electrical pioneer Thomas Edison (18471931)
went out of his way to demonstrate that direct current (DC) was a better way to supply electrical
power than alternating current (AC), a system backed by his Serbian-born arch-rival Nikola
Tesla (18561943). Edison tried all kinds of devious ways to convince people that AC was too
dangerous, from electrocuting an elephant to (rather cunningly) supporting the use of AC in the
electric chair for administering the death penalty. Even so, Tesla's system won the day and the
world has pretty much run on AC power ever since.
The only trouble is, though many of our appliances are designed to work with AC, small-
scale power generators often produce DC. That means if you want to run something like an AC-
powered gadget from a DC car battery in a mobile home, you need a device that will convert DC
to ACan inverter, as it's called.
In bigger household appliances, electricity works a different way. The power supply that
comes from the outlet in your wall is based on alternating current (AC), where the electricity
switches direction around 5060 times each second (in other words, at a frequency of 5060 Hz).
It can be hard to understand how AC delivers energy when it's constantly changing its mind
about where it's going! If the electrons coming out of your wall outlet get, let's say, a few
millimeters down the cable then have to reverse direction and go back again, how do they ever
get to the lamp on your table to make it light up?
The answer is actually quite simple. Imagine the cables running between the lamp and
the wall packed full of electrons. When you flick on the switch, all the electrons filling the cable
vibrate back and forth in the lamp's filamentand that rapid shuffling about converts electrical
energy into heat and makes the lamp bulb glow. The electrons don't necessarily have to run in
circle to transport energy: in AC, they simply "run on the spot."
Of course the kind of inverters you buy in electrical stores don't work quite this way, though
some are indeed mechanical: they use electromagnetic switches that flick on and off at high
speed to reverse the current direction. Inverters like this often produce what's known as a square-
wave output: the current is either flowing one way or the opposite way or it's instantly swapping
over between the two states:
Electronic inverters can be used to produce this kind of smoothly varying AC output from
a DC input. They use electronic components called inductors and capacitors to make the output
current rise and fall more gradually than the abrupt, on/off-switching square wave output you get
with a basic inverter.
Inverters can also be used with transformers to change a certain DC input voltage into a
completely different AC output voltage (either higher or lower) but the output power must
always be less than the input power: it follows from the conservation of energy that an inverter
and transformer can't give out more power than they take in and some energy is bound to be lost
as heat as electricity flows through the various electrical and electronic components. In practice,
the efficiency of an inverter is often over 90 percent, though basic physics tells us some energy
however littleis always being wasted somewhere!
Imagine you're a DC battery and someone taps you on the shoulder and asks you to
produce AC instead. How would you do it? If all the current you produce flows out in one
direction, what about adding a simple switch to your output lead? Switching your current on and
off, very rapidly, would give pulses of direct currentwhich would do at least half the job. To
make proper AC, you'd need a switch that allowed you to reverse the current completely and do
it about 5060 times every second. Visualize yourself as a human battery swapping your contacts
back and forth over 3000 times a minute.
In essence, an old-fashioned mechanical inverter boils down to a switching unit connected
to an electricity transformer. We know that a transformer is an electromagnetic devices that
change low-voltage AC to high-voltage AC, or vice-versa, using two coils of wire (called the
primary and secondary) wound around a common iron core. In a mechanical inverter, either an
electric motor or some other kind of automated switching mechanism flips the incoming direct
current back and forth in the primary, simply by reversing the contacts, and that produces
alternating current in the secondaryso it's not so very different from the imaginary inverter that
sketched out. The switching device works a bit like the one in an electric doorbell. When the
power is connected, it magnetizes the switch, pulling it open and switching it off very briefly. A
spring pulls the switch back into position, turning it on again and repeating the process over and
over again.
The basic concept of an electromechanical inverter is that DC feeds into the primary
winding (pink zigzag wires on the left side) of a toroidal transformer (brown donut), through a
spinning plate (red and blue) with criss-cross connections. As the plate rotates, it repeatedly
switches over the connections to the primary winding, so the transformer is receiving AC as its
input instead of DC. This is a step-up transformer with more windings in the secondary (yellow
zigzag, right-hand side) than the primary, so it boosts a small AC input voltage into a larger AC
output. The speed at which the disk rotates governs the frequency of the AC output. Most
inverters don't work anything like this; this simply illustrates the concept. An inverter set up this
way would produce a very rough square wave output.
12 VDC, for smaller consumer and commercial inverters that typically run from a
rechargeable 12 V lead acid battery.
24 and 48 VDC, which are common standards for home energy systems.
Hundreds of thousands of volts, where the inverter is part of a high voltage power current
power transmission system.
Output voltage:-
The AC output voltage of a power inverter is often regulated to be the same as the grid line
voltage, typically 120 or 240 VAC, even when there are changes in the load that the inverter is
driving. This allows the inverter to power numerous devices designed for standard line power.
Some inverters also allow selectable or continuously variable output voltages.
A power inverter will often have an overall power rating expressed in watts or kilowatts.
This describes the power that will be available to the device the inverter is driving and,
indirectly, the power that will be needed from the DC source. Smaller popular consumer and
commercial devices designed to mimic line power typically range from 150 to 3000 watts.
Not all inverter applications are solely or primarily concerned with power delivery; in some
cases the frequency and or waveform properties are used by the follow-on circuit or device.
CHAPTER 2
TYPES OF INVERTERS
If one simply switch a DC current on and off, or flip it back and forth so its direction keeps
reversing, what he ends up with is very abrupt changes of current: all in one direction, all in the
other direction, and back again. Draw a chart of the current (or voltage) against time and one will
get a square wave. Although electricity varying in that fashion is, technically, an alternating
current, it's not at all like the alternating current supplied to our homes, which varies in a much
more smoothly undulating sine wave). Generally speaking, hefty appliances in our homes that
use raw power (things like electric heaters, incandescent lamps, kettles, or fridges) don't much
care what shape wave they receive: all they want is energy and lots of it so square waves really
don't bother them. Electronic devices, on the other hand, are much more fussy and prefer the
smoother input they get from a sine wave.
This explains why inverters come in two distinct flavors:
1) True/pure sine wave inverters (often shortened to PSW)
2) Modified/quasi sine wave inverters (shortened to MSW).
As their name suggests, true inverters use what are called toroidal (donut-shaped)
transformers and electronic circuits to transform direct current into a smoothly varying
alternating current very similar to the kind of genuine sine wave normally supplied to our homes.
They can be used to power any kind of AC appliance from a DC source, including TVs,
computers, video games, radios, and stereos. Modified sine wave inverters, on the other hand,
use relatively inexpensive electronics ( thyristors, diodes, and other simple components) to
produce a kind of "rounded-off" square wave (a much rougher approximation to a sine wave) and
while they're fine for delivering power to hefty electric appliances, they can and do cause
problems with delicate electronics (or anything with an electronic or microprocessor controller).
Also, if you think about it, their rounded-off square waves are delivering more power to the
appliance overall than a pure sine wave (there's more area under a square than a curve), so there's
some risk of overheating with MSW inverters. On the positive side, they tend to be quite a bit
cheaper than true inverters and often work more efficiently (which is important if you want to
run something off a battery with a limited chargebecause it will run for longer).
Although many inverters work as standalone units, with battery storage, that are totally
independent from the grid, others (known as utility-interactive inverters or grid-tied inverters)
are specifically designed to be connected to the grid all the time; typically they're used to send
electricity from something like a solar panel back to the grid at exactly the right voltage and
frequency. That's fine if main objective is to generate our own power. It's not so helpful if we
want to be independent of the grid sometimes or we want a backup power source in case of an
outage, because if our connection to the grid goes down, and we're not making any electricity of
our own (for example, it's night-time and our solar panels are inactive), the inverter goes down
too, and we're completely without poweras helpless as we would be whether we were
generating our own power or not. For this reason, some people use bimodal or birectional
inverters, which can either work in standalone or grid-tied mode (though not both at the same
time). Since they have extra bits and pieces, they tend to be more bulky and more expensive.
Most of the Home appliance alternating electrical power is observed. However AC power is
not always available and the need for mobility and simplicity has given in batteries Thus, for
portable AC power, for this purpose inverter is needed. Inverters take a DC voltage from an
input terminal of a battery or a solar panel as input.
These inverters are classified by depending on their output as three types that is a square wave,
modified-sine wave and pure sine wave. Normally Off-the-shelf inverters are generally either
square wave or modified-sine wave and sine wave inverter. These 3 types of inverters less
expensive and it is modified though delivering the same average voltage to a load, it is not
appropriate for delicate electronic devices on the precise timing. Most of the pure sine wave
inverter offer having good accuracy it is very high load capacity, but they are more complex in
design and more expensive.
Pure sine wave inverters will power devices with more accuracy less power loss, and less
heat generation. Pure sine wave inversion process is accomplished by taking a DC voltage source
and switching it across a load using an H-bridge parameter. If this voltage needs to be boosted
from a DC source, It can be accomplished before the AC stage by using a DC-DC boost
converter or after the AC stage by using a boost transformer. The inverted signal itself is
composed of a pulse-width-modulated (PWM) signal the PWM signal is encodes a sine wave.
The duty cycle of the sine wave output signal is changed such that the sine wave power is
transmitted. This output power can be used alternatively.
There are two basic designs for producing household plug-in voltage from a lower-voltage
DC source, the first of which uses a switching boost converter to produce a higher-voltage DC
and then converts to AC. The second method converts DC to AC at battery level and uses a line
frequency transformer to create the output voltage.
This is one of the simplest waveforms an inverter design can produce and is best suited to
low-sensitivity applications such as lighting and heating. Square wave output can produce
"humming" when connected to audio equipment and is generally unsuitable for sensitive
electronics.
The conversion of DC to AC is most commonly done through the use of MOSFET inverter
circuits which can switch the voltage across the load, providing a digital approximation of the
desired AC signal. The simplest variant of this inversion is the production of a square wave
conversion of a sine wave. In the form of square wave, The load voltage must be switched
majorly from high voltage to low Voltage, without using for an intermediate step (0V). In order
to deliver the same power as the sine wave to be approximated, the amplitude value of the square
wave value and sine waves RMS value is same.
Majorly square wave inverter applications voltage source inverter having many applications in
many low cost AC motor drives, That is like as an uninterrupted power supply and circuits
utilizing electrical resonance between an inductor and capacitor.Some examples of circuits
utilizing like resonance phenomenon are induction heating units and electronic ballasts for
fluorescent lamps.
Most of the power source for most applications is a 60Hz, 230v AC sine wave, Identical to the
120V Vrms Source available. It is majorly available from some developed companies. Most of
the low power electronic household plug-in devices are designed to work with this source (high
power devices such as cooking ovens use a 240V source). These electronic equipments will be
Most likely to work properly and most efficiently on such a voltage and current sources. The full
sine wave source is produced Most easily for high power applications through rotating electrical
machinery such as naval gas-turbine machineries, homemade applications of diesel or gasoline
backup generators or other types of generators employed by power companies that employs a
shaft torque to create an AC current.
These power sources provides a relatively clean, pure sine waves (lacking significant harmonics
and high frequency noise) thanks to their analog rotational things. Such as rotating machinery
can be an appropriate for low-power backup supply usage due to their high cost, Huge size and
required maintenance. There are mainly useful for pure sine wave applications.
The Non sinusoidal waveform generated is also called as a relaxation oscillator. The op amp
relaxation oscillator is also called as a square wave generator. The frequency of the oscillator is
f=1/T. Here T is also known as a Time and f is a frequency of the oscillator. In this op amp
generator both Z1 and Z2. The unsymmetrical square wave can be had by different square waves.
Office buildings considering a backup power inverter, a true sine wave model will allow proper
function of all electronic office equipment and fluorescent tube lighting. And some of electronic
equipments like a Toyostove, battery chargers, electric drills, digital clock radios or other
sensitive electronics should consider a true sine wave inverter to ensure proper functioning of
all household appliances.
Applications
It can applicable many power applications like electric tube light, kitchen appliances, power
tools, Tvs, radios, computers and many more electronics gadgets we are using.
Various inverters may have different features making them better suited for different specific
applications. Very small inverters are available that connect to a car cigarette lighter, with a
single three-prong AC outlet as the output. Large inverters are generally designed to be
hardwired into a building electrical system. Some inverters offer 240 volts output. The right
inverter for any specific use can be found with the help of an experienced inverter dealer.
Its will be useful in all electronic applications,when using pure sine wave power. True sine
wave inverters will produce AC power as well as a better than utility power, Ensuring that even
the most sensitive equipment will run properly. While sine wave inverters are more expensive
than modifying sine wave models, The quality of their waveform can be a definite advantage.
The AC output frequency of a power inverter device is usually the same as standard power
line frequency, 50 or 60 Hertz.
If the output of the device or circuit is to be further conditioned (for example stepped up)
then the frequency may be much higher for good transformer efficiency.
Batteries
The runtime of an inverter is dependent on the battery power and the amount of power being
drawn from the inverter at a given time. As the amount of equipment using the inverter increases,
the runtime will decrease. In order to prolong the runtime of an inverter, additional batteries can
be added to the inverter.
When attempting to add more batteries to an inverter, there are two basic options for
installation: Series Configuration and Parallel Configuration.
Series configuration
If the goal is to increase the overall voltage of the inverter, one can daisy chain batteries in
a Series Configuration. In a Series Configuration, if a single battery dies, the other batteries will
not be able to power the load.
Parallel configuration
If the goal is to increase capacity and prolong the runtime of the inverter, batteries can be
connected in parallel. This increases the overall Amperehour(Ah) rating of the battery set.
If a single battery is discharged though, the other batteries will then discharge through it. This
can lead to rapid discharge of the entire pack, or even an over-current and possible fire. To avoid
this, large paralleled batteries may be connected via diodes or intelligent monitoring with
automatic switching to isolate an under-voltage battery from the others.
CHAPTER
Applications
Inverter designed to provide 115 VAC from the 12 VDC source provided in an automobile. The
unit shown provides up to 1.2 amperes of alternating current, or enough to power two sixty watt
light bulbs.
An inverter converts the DC electricity from sources such as batteries or fuel cells to AC
electricity. The electricity can be at any required voltage; in particular it can operate AC
equipment designed for mains operation, or rectified to produce DC at any desired voltage.
One very common use for inverters is in emergency power supplies, also called uninterruptible
power supplies or uninterruptible power sources (both going by the acronym UPS). If your
household power fails in an outage (blackout), you might have a UPS as a backupbut how
does it work?
A typical UPS stores energy in electrical form using rechargeable batteries (some UPS systems
store energy in mechanical form using a high-speed flywheel, spun to high speed by an electric
motor). When the power is flowing normally, the batteries are being trickle charged by DC,
which is produced from the AC power supply using a transformer and rectifier circuit. If the
power fails, what you have at your disposal is charged-up batteries that will produce direct
current, but which need to produce alternating current to power your home. So when the UPS is
supplying energy, the batteries pump DC through an inverter to produce AC.
A UPS is often combined with a surge protector and voltage optimization equipment to produce a
resilient power supply capable of surviving spikes, surges, over-voltage, under-voltage, or a
complete loss of power.
Power grid
Grid tied inverters are designed to feed into the electric power distribution system. They transfer
synchronously with the line and have as little harmonic content as possible. They also need a
means of detecting the presence of utility power for safety reasons, so as not to continue to
dangerously feed power to the grid during a power outage.
Solar
Internal view of a solar inverter. Note the many large capacitors (blue cylinders), used to store
energy briefly and improve the output waveform.
Solar inverter
A solar inverter is a balance of system(BOS) component of a photovoltanic system and can be
used for both, grid connected and off-grid systems. Solar inverters have special functions adapted
for use with photovoltanic arrays, including maximum power point tracking and protection. Solar
micro inverters differ from conventional converters, as an individual micro-converter is attached
to each solar panel. This can improve the overall efficiency of the system. The output from
several micro inverters is then combined and often fed to the electrical grid.
Induction heating
Inverters convert low frequency main AC power to higher frequency for use in induction heating.
To do this, AC power is first rectified to provide DC power. The inverter then changes the DC
power to high frequency AC power. Due to the reduction in the number of DC sources employed,
the structure becomes more reliable and the output voltage has higher resolution due to an
increase in the number of steps so that the reference sinusoidal voltage can be better achieved.
This configuration has recently become very popular in AC power supply and adjustable speed
drive applications. This new inverter can avoid extra clamping diodes or voltage balancing
capacitors.
There are three kinds of level shifted modulation techniques, namely:
Portable consumer devices that allow the user to connect a battery, or set of batteries, to
the device to produce AC power to run various electrical items such as lights, televisions,
kitchen appliances, and power tools.
Use in power generation systems such as electric utility companies or solar generating
systems to convert DC power to AC power.
Use within any larger electronic system where an engineering need exists for deriving an
AC source from a DC source.
Circuit description
Basic design
In one simple inverter circuit, DC power is connected to a transformer through the center tap of
the primary winding. A switch is rapidly switched back and forth to allow current to flow back to
the DC source following two alternate paths through one end of the primary winding and then
the other. The alternation of the direction of current in the primary winding of the transformer
produces alternating current (AC) in the secondary circuit.
The electromechanical version of the switching device includes two stationary contacts and a
spring supported moving contact. The spring holds the movable contact against one of the
stationary contacts and an electromagnet pulls the movable contact to the opposite stationary
contact. The current in the electromagnet is interrupted by the action of the switch so that the
switch continually switches rapidly back and forth. This type of electromechanical inverter
switch, called a vibrator or buzzer, was once used in vacuum tube automobile radios. A similar
mechanism has been used in door bells, buzzers and tattoo machines.
As they became available with adequate power ratings, transistors and various other types of
semiconductor switches have been incorporated into inverter circuit designs. Certain ratings,
especially for large systems (many kilowatts) use thyristors (SCR). SCRs provide large power
handling capability in a semiconductor device, and can readily be controlled over a variable
firing range.
The switch in the simple inverter described above, when not coupled to an output transformer,
produces a square voltage waveform due to its simple off and on nature as opposed to the
sinusoidal waveform that is the usual waveform of an AC power supply. Using Fourier analysis,
periodic waveforms are represented as the sum of an infinite series of sine waves. The sine wave
that has the same frequency as the original waveform is called the fundamental component. The
other sine waves, called harmonics, that are included in the series have frequencies that are
integral multiples of the fundamental frequency.
Fourier analysis can be used to calculate the total harmonic distortion (THD). The total harmonic
distortion (THD) is the square root of the sum of the squares of the harmonic voltages divided by
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Fourier analysis reveals that a waveform, like a square wave, that is anti-symmetrical about the
180 degree point contains only odd harmonics, the 3rd, 5th, 7th, etc. Waveforms that have steps
of certain widths and heights can attenuate certain lower harmonics at the expense of amplifying
higher harmonics. For example, by inserting a zero-voltage step between the positive and
negative sections of the square-wave, all of the harmonics that are divisible by three (3rd and 9th,
etc.) can be eliminated. That leaves only the 5th, 7th, 11th, 13th etc. The required width of the
steps is one third of the period for each of the positive and negative steps and one sixth of the
period for each of the zero-voltage steps.
Changing the square wave as described above is an example of pulse-width modulation (PWM).
Modulating, or regulating the width of a square-wave pulse is often used as a method of
regulating or adjusting an inverter's output voltage. When voltage control is not required, a fixed
pulse width can be selected to reduce or eliminate selected harmonics. Harmonic elimination
techniques are generally applied to the lowest harmonics because filtering is much more practical
at high frequencies, where the filter components can be much smaller and less
expensive. Multiple pulse-width or carrier based PWM control schemes produce waveforms that
are composed of many narrow pulses. The frequency represented by the number of narrow pulses
per second is called the switching frequency or carrier frequency. These control schemes are
often used in variable-frequency motor control inverters because they allow a wide range of
output voltage and frequency adjustment while also improving the quality of the waveform.
Multilevel inverters provide another approach to harmonic cancellation. Multilevel inverters
provide an output waveform that exhibits multiple steps at several voltage levels. For example, it
is possible to produce a more sinusoidal wave by having split-rail direct current inputs at two
voltages, or positive and negative inputs with a central ground. By connecting the inverter output
terminals in sequence between the positive rail and ground, the positive rail and the negative rail,
the ground rail and the negative rail, then both to the ground rail, a stepped waveform is
generated at the inverter output. This is an example of a three level inverter: the two voltages and
ground.
More on achieving a sine wave
Resonant inverters produce sine waves with LC circuits to remove the harmonics from a simple
square wave. Typically there are several series- and parallel-resonant LC circuits, each tuned to a
different harmonic of the power line frequency. This simplifies the electronics, but the inductors
and capacitors tend to be large and heavy. Its high efficiency makes this approach popular in
large uninterruptible power supplies in data centers that run the inverter continuously in an
"online" mode to avoid any switchover transient when power is lost.
A closely related approach uses a ferroresonant transformer, also known as a constant voltage
transformer, to remove harmonics and to store enough energy to sustain the load for a few AC
cycles. This property makes them useful in standby power supplies to eliminate the switchover
transient that otherwise occurs during a power failure while the normally idle inverter starts and
the mechanical relays are switching to its output.
Enhanced quantization
A proposal suggested in Power Electronics magazine utilizes two voltages as an
improvement over the common commercialized technology which can only apply DC bus
voltage in either directions or turn it off. The proposal adds an additional voltage to this design.
Each cycle consists of sequence as: v1, v2, v1, off/pause, -v1, -v2, -v1.
Three-phase inverters
3-phase inverter switching circuit showing 6-step switching sequence and waveform of voltage
between terminals A and C (23-2 states)
To construct inverters with higher power ratings, two six-step three-phase inverters can be
connected in parallel for a higher current rating or in series for a higher voltage rating. In either
case, the output waveforms are phase shifted to obtain a 12-step waveform. If additional
inverters are combined, an 18-step inverter is obtained with three inverters etc. Although
inverters are usually combined for the purpose of achieving increased voltage or current ratings,
the quality of the waveform is improved as well.
Size
Compared to other household electric devices, inverters are large in size and volume. In 2014
Google together with IEEE started an open competition to build a (much) smaller power inverter,
with a $1,000,000 prize.
CHAPTER
HISTORY
Early inverters
From the late nineteenth century through the middle of the twentieth century, DC-to-
AC power conversion was accomplished using rotary converters or motor generator sets (M-G
sets). In the early twentieth century, vacuum tubes and gas filled tubes began to be used as
switches in inverter circuits. The most widely used type of tube was the thyratron.
The origins of electromechanical inverters explain the source of the term inverter. Early
AC-to-DC converters used an induction or synchronous AC motor direct-connected to a
generator (dynamo) so that the generator's commutator reversed its connections at exactly the
right moments to produce DC. A later development is the synchronous converter, in which the
motor and generator windings are combined into one armature, with slip rings at one end and a
commutator at the other and only one field frame. The result with either is AC-in, DC-out. With
an M-G set, the DC can be considered to be separately generated from the AC; with a
synchronous converter, in a certain sense it can be considered to be "mechanically rectified AC".
Given the right auxiliary and control equipment, an M-G set or rotary converter can be "run
backwards", converting DC to AC. Hence an inverter is an inverted converter.
Since early transistors were not available with sufficient voltage and current ratings for most
inverter applications, it was the 1957 introduction of the thyristor or silicon-controlled
rectifier (SCR) that initiated the transition to solid state inverter circuits.
Rectifier circuits are often classified by the number of current pulses that flow to the DC
side of the rectifier per cycle of AC input voltage. A single phase half wave rectifier is a one-
pulse circuit and a single phase full wave rectifier is a two-pulse circuit. A three-phase half-wave
rectifier is a three-pulse circuit and a three-phase full-wave rectifier is a six-pulse circuit.
With three-phase rectifiers, two or more rectifiers are sometimes connected in series or parallel
to obtain higher voltage or current ratings. The rectifier inputs are supplied from special
transformers that provide phase shifted outputs. This has the effect of phase multiplication. Six
phases are obtained from two transformers, twelve phases from three transformers and so on.
The associated rectifier circuits are 12-pulse rectifiers, 18-pulse rectifiers and so on...
When controlled rectifier circuits are operated in the inversion mode, they would be classified by
pulse number also. Rectifier circuits that have a higher pulse number have reduced harmonic
content in the AC input current and reduced ripple in the DC output voltage. In the inversion
mode, circuits that have a higher pulse number have lower harmonic content in the AC output
voltage waveform.
Other notes
The large switching devices for power transmission applications installed until 1970
predominantly used mercury arc valves. Modern inverters are usually solid state (static
inverters). A modern design method features components arranged in an H bridge configuration.
This design is also quite popular with smaller-scale consumer devices.
Research
Using 3-D printing and novel semiconductors, researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak
Ridge National Laboratory have created a power inverter that could make electric vehicles
lighter, more powerful and more efficient.
A solar panel is able to convert sun rays into direct current at lower potential
levels. For example a solar panel may be specified for delivering 36 volts at 8
amps under optimal conditions, but we cannot use this magnitude of power
for operating our domestic appliances, because these appliances can work
only at mains potentials or at voltages in the ranges of 120 to 230 V. Further
more the current should be an AC and not DC as normally received from a
solar panel.
We have come across a number of inverter circuits posted in this blog and
we have studied how they work.
Inverters are used for converting and stepping up low voltage battery power
to high voltage AC mains levels.
Therefore inverters can be effectively used for converting the DC from a solar
panel into mains outputs that would suitably power our domestic equipment.
If the solar panel is able to generate enough current and voltage, its output
may be used for directly operating an inverter and the connected household
appliances and also simultaneously for charging a battery. The charged
battery may be used for powering the loads via the inverter, during night
times when solar energy is not present.
However if the solar panel is smaller in size and unable to generate sufficient
power, it may be used just for charging the battery, and becomes useful for
operating the inverter only after sunset.
Referring to the circuit diagram, we are able to witness a simple set up using
a solar panel, an inverter and a battery. The three units are connected
through a solar regulator circuit that distributes the power to the respective
units after appropriate regulations of the received power from the solar
panel.
Assuming the voltage to be 36 and the current to be 10 amps from the solar
panel, the inverter is selected with an input operating voltage of 24 volts @ 6
amps, providing a total power of about 120 watts.
A fraction of the solar panels amp which amounts to about 3 amps is spared
for charging a battery, intended to be used after sunset.
We also assume that the solar panel is mounted over a solar tracker so that
it is able to deliver the specified requirements as long as the sun is visible
over the skies.
The input power of 36 volts is applied to the input of a regulator which trims
it down to 24 volts.
The load connected to the output of the inverter is selected such that it does
not force the inverter more than 6 amps from the solar panel. From the
remaining 4 amps, 2 amps is supplied to the battery for charging it.
The remaining 2 amps are not used for the sake of maintaining better
efficiency of the whole system.
The circuits are all those which have been already discussed in my blogs, we
can see how these are intelligently configured to each other for
implementing the required operations.
Fig. solar inverter circuit
The charger section in the above circuit may be suitably upgraded for enabling the charging of
high current batteries in the order of 100 AH to 250 AH.
An outboard transistor TIP36 is appropriately integrated across the IC 338 for facilitating the
required high current charging.
The emitter resistor of TIP36 must be calculated appropriately otherwise the transistor might
just blow off, do it by trial and error method, start with 1 ohm initially, then gradually go on
reducing it until the required amount of current becomes achievable at the output.
Solar Inverter/Charger Circuit for Science Project
The following article explains a simple solar inverter circuit consisting of it's own battery charger
and an automatic changeover relay system for switching the battery to the inverter in the absence
of solar energy.
The design:
The circuit mainly consists of two stages viz: the inverter, and the automatic relay changeover.
During day time for so long the sun light remains reasonably strong, the panel voltage is used for
charging the battery and also for powering the inverter via the relay changeover contacts.
The automatic changeover circuit preset is set such that the associated relay trips OFF when the
panel voltage falls below 13 volts.
The above action disconnects the solar panel from the inverter and connects the charged battery
with the inverter so that the output loads continue to run using the battery power.
Circuit Description:
Resistors R1, R2, R3, R4 along with T1, T2 and the transformer forms the inverter section. 12
volts applied across the center tap and the ground starts the inverter immediately, however here
we do not connect the battery directly at these points, rather through a relay changeover stage.
The transistor T3 with the associated components and the relay forms the relay change
over stage The LDR is kept outside the house or at a position where it can sense the day light.
The P1 preset is adjusted such that T3 just stops conducting and cuts off the relay in case the
ambient light falls below a certain level, or simply when the voltage goes below 13 volts. This
obviously happens when the sun light becomes too weak and is no longer able to sustain the
specified voltage levels.
However as long as sun light remains bright, the relay stays triggered, connecting the solar panel
voltage directly to the inverter (transformer center tap) via the N/O contacts. Thus the inverter
becomes usable through the solar panel during day time.
The solar panel is also simultaneously used for charging the battery via D2 during day time so
that it charges up fully by the time it gets dusk.
The solar panel is selected such that it never generates more than 15 volts even at peak sun light
levels.
The maximum power from this inverter will not be more than 60 watts.
Parts List for the proposed solar inverter with charger circuit intended for science projects.
R5 = 10K
D1, D2 = 6A4
D3 = 1N4148
T3 = BC547
C1 = 100uF/25V