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Member's Forum Using a DC-DC Isolator to allow single power input to case?
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Using a DC-DC Isolator to allow single power input to case?

Andrew J
Andrew J over 5 years ago

I'm working on something where I use an Arduino talking via I2C to a DAC, an ADC and an RTC and I'm provisioning an I2C isolator and a digital isolator (for digital pins) to provide separation between the two.  I'm doing this to prevent blowing up the Arduino if something goes wrong and also just because I want to as part of experimenting/learning.

 

This only works if both power and ground on sides A and B of the isolators are separate from each other.  To complicate matters, if this all works and I encase it then I only want one power cord into the case - something like a 15V wallwart affair.  This would, inevitably, tie grounds together and the isolators won't work: not 'won't work in an isolation' sense, but not work at all - I've tried it!

 

So I'm wondering if I could feed the 15V supply into a 12V regulator and subsequently a 5V regulator for Side B (I need 12V and 5V on that side) and into a 12V DC-DC isolator that outputs 5V for side A which also powers the Arduino. 

 

Something like this Tracopower supply.  When I look at this I see that the Vin ground is connected on Side B, but the Vout -Ve is isolated for Side A so it seems like it would do the trick.  I thought I'd ask here first before committing to spending money to try it out or indeed if there were other ideas.

 

My main criteria are:

5V, 1A output

Clean enough to power an Arduino and 5V vin isolator (I could use a supply with a higher ouput voltage and feed through a 5V regulator)

Only 1 main power input.  If there's no solution that allows for this, I'd do away with the isolation altogether.  In reality it's not really needed.

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  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 5 years ago +3 verified
    Hi Andrew, Yes this is an isolated DC to DC converter and it will provide a voltage that is not common to the input voltage. this should allow you to do what you are talking about though I am not weighing…
  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps +3 suggested
    Hi Jan, I believe there were two models listed on the data sheet. One had +/- with a common and the other was just +/- with no common. If I read it correctly both of these options were isolated from the…
  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to Andrew J +3 suggested
    If you need single output, you're good. The output is isolated. If you want me to pre-check something, I have one of the same family;
  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    Interestingly, perhaps, Side A SDA was pulling down ok, Side B wasn't.  SCL Side B was following Side A.

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Input current, power supply without current limit, small load on the +12V. -12V open

    Traco Power TEN 64822

     

    Input 48 V:

    image

    Input 24 V (input current when stable: 20 mA):

    image

     

    Almost max load on +12 V, -12 unloaded:

    (45 Ohm , 245 mA, input current when stable: 160 mA)

    image

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    Hot plugging the input, with the power supply already on 24V. +12 V loaded to 250 mA, -12V open.

     

    image

     

    Is this the inrush you refered to, michaelkellett?

    image

     

     

    edit:

    When I restrict my PSU to 400 mA, then hot plug the Traco, it starts just fine without peaking to 1.4 A. I'll check what the minimum current it needs to get started...

    edit edit:

    My PSU current restriction isn't fast enough. When I put it on 200 mA, the inrush still peaks at 1.025 A during 2 samples image

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to Andrew J

    Andrew J  wrote:

     

    Interestingly, perhaps, Side A SDA was pulling down ok, Side B wasn't.  SCL Side B was following Side A.

    The clock does not have to negotiate, because it always comes from the master.

    It's on the data lines that there may be conflicts that need to be dealt with.

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  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    I mentioned the inrush, as the data sheet mentions it in respect to inrush voltage.  It suggests using a 220uF 100V electrolytic in front of the component to manage this - from your photo, it would look like there is a large electrolytic but I couldn't see what it was.  1.4A is a lot though - I'll have to watch out for that.

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to Andrew J

    1.4 A is because I put my meter in the 1 A range. 1.4 is the limit then. If I put it in the 10 A range, it also peaks out.

    That's normal. The input capacitor is a shortcut initially. Only the PSU impedance, the test leads and the capacitor's ESR restrict the inrush.

    it's only a few samples wide. There's virtually no energy there. Every hard-switched DC circuit with an input capacitor has this phenomena.

    The capacitor in my circuit is 47uF.

     

    Input capacitors cause inrush. The more capacitance, the higher the inrush energy. 220 uF would increase the (not really a) drama...

     

    edit: you don't have to worry about it. You just need to take care that you have enough oooomph in the supply to get going and deliver the nominal current once stable. It would only be an issue if your source collapses under the initial demand and doesn't recover.

     

     

    Here's what the output switch-on curve  looks like, with 125 mA current (96 Ohm load):

    image

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  • Gough Lui
    0 Gough Lui over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    Indeed, I tested both the HVP-70 and Micsig DP10013 in this posting:

    https://goughlui.com/2018/12/16/review-eevblog-hvp-70-70mhz-micsig-dp10013-100mhz-high-voltage-differential-probes/

     

    You do get what you pay for to some extent ... if you need isolation for high-voltage circuit probing, these are good options. But if you're interested in low voltage, then you might want a standard differential probe otherwise the noise might cause problems for your measurement.

     

    As for the original query - yes, many Traco Power modules are isolated, and this is the approach taken by the Infineon Differential Gate Driver demo board as well as the B&K Precision DAS240 Multi-Channel Logger (along with a digital isolator) to provide isolation.

     

    - Gough

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 5 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    Hello Jan,

    I've never investigated in detail - just observed the current limit setting needed on the bench PSU to get them up and running.

     

    I think I still have boards with TRACOs on somewhere - I'll try lighting one up later this weekend.

     

    MK

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 5 years ago in reply to Andrew J

    The Traco behaves OK, powered from a Meanwell 48 V, 1.25 A brick. (48 V is the nominal input power for the Traco TEN 6-4xxTraco TEN 6-4xx series I'm using here).

     

    Because it powers the analog side, I'll include a filter circuit. The analog side would then be powered from the filter output. I'd power the fan directly from the Traco output, before the filter ...

    image

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  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 5 years ago

    The isolator arrived and I hooked it up - in the end I went for a Recom RS6-1205S.  It's very similar to the Traco one, a bit cheaper.  It actually works for what I want to do: using it to power Side A of the i2c and digital isolators as well as the Arduino.  I did some quick measurements:

     

    Initially load was just a 1K resistor:

    AC with 0.1uf and 1uf capacitor on the output:

    image

    DC with 0.1uf and 1uf capacitor on the output:

    image

    AC with 0.1uf, 1uf and 10uf (electrolytic) capacitor on the output:

    image

    DC with 0.1uf, 1uf and 10uf (electrolytic) capacitor on the output:

    image

    Powering side A, still with 0.1uf, 1uf and 10uf (electrolytic) capacitor on the output:

     

    AC:

    image

    DC:

    image

     

    It's quite noisy, as Michael alluded to, and there is quite a large amount of ripple induced on the DC (datasheet states 25mV to 75mV) but it's on a breadboard without any great output filtering.  I still need to work through any impact this has on Side b (where the DAC and ADC are located.)  In theory, I would expect none as they are driven through I2C commands and the DAC is powered from a REF5040 which is used as the reference source for the DAC output.

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