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Passive Components
Forum I want to make a capacitor discharge tool
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Related

I want to make a capacitor discharge tool

jw0752
jw0752 over 7 years ago

I want to make a capacitor discharge tool for use in an industrial application where the voltage may be as high as 400 volts and I have no idea what the maximum capacitance may be. I have been weighing the pros and cons of different resistor values. Then I thought, Why not ask some of the best engineers on the planet? If you have some insights for me it would be appreciated.

 

John

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 7 years ago +8 suggested
    Sounds like it's for a switch mode power supply. Most of them are 470-1000uF, and to prevent damage you'd want to restrict the current to 1A. R= E/I so 400/1 = 400 ohms. Discharge from here https://www…
  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 7 years ago in reply to jc2048 +7 suggested
    Hi Jon, As promised I have run some experiments after returning home. I have taken a 2000 uF 200 Volt capacitor and charged it up. The formula for energy in a capacitor is 1/2 CV^2 which works out to about…
  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 7 years ago +7 suggested
    Last Post: I put the unit together this afternoon using the advice and wisdom from my Forum friends. The series resistor was lowered to 330 ohms and wattage increased to 5 Watts. I discharged the 2000…
Parents
  • dougw
    0 dougw over 7 years ago

    I like the simple resistor approach, but if you want to have some fun you could get a sample of a USCi UJN1205K and play around with it. These devices can act as current limiters up to 1200 V - without power supplies. I'd like to see what jc2048 would do with it. Maybe devise some zener circuit to get Vgs to be 4 V.

    By the way - good application for your special probes.

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  • jc2048
    0 jc2048 over 7 years ago in reply to dougw

    I'm not too good with FETs - when I started out they were a bit exotic and I've never had to use them for anything.

     

    A constant-current configuration would be like this, wouldn't it?

     

    image

     

    The FET shuts down when the gate gets to below about -6V (below the source), so that would regulate the voltage across the resistor to about 6V and keep the current at around an amp.

     

    It would need a reasonable heatsink - initial dissipation is 400W (on 400V), although it comes down quite rapidly. The 6 ohm resistor would need to be 10W or so.

     

    That SiC part is very expensive though. You could build a whole constant-current load with a MOSFET for that (including a processor to give you constant-wattage rather than constant-current and other nice things).

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  • jc2048
    0 jc2048 over 7 years ago in reply to dougw

    I'm not too good with FETs - when I started out they were a bit exotic and I've never had to use them for anything.

     

    A constant-current configuration would be like this, wouldn't it?

     

    image

     

    The FET shuts down when the gate gets to below about -6V (below the source), so that would regulate the voltage across the resistor to about 6V and keep the current at around an amp.

     

    It would need a reasonable heatsink - initial dissipation is 400W (on 400V), although it comes down quite rapidly. The 6 ohm resistor would need to be 10W or so.

     

    That SiC part is very expensive though. You could build a whole constant-current load with a MOSFET for that (including a processor to give you constant-wattage rather than constant-current and other nice things).

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  • jc2048
    0 jc2048 over 7 years ago in reply to jc2048

    Just in case someone decides to try this - the device can't manage 400W anyway, so the current would have to be lower.

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