Maxim > Design Support > Technical Documents > Application Notes > Energy Measurement & Metering > APP 5292

Similar documents
APPLICATION NOTE 5581 CHALLENGE THE CONVENTIONAL - MAKE UNIPOLAR DACS BIPOLAR

Differential Amplifiers

APPLICATION NOTE 6206 SIMPLE, EFFECTIVE METHOD AND CIRCUIT TO MEASURE VERY-LOW 1/F VOLTAGE REFERENCE NOISE (< 1ΜV P-P, 0.

APPLICATION NOTE 2027 Simple Methods Reduce Input Ripple for All Charge Pumps

LM13600 Dual Operational Transconductance Amplifiers with Linearizing Diodes and Buffers

Application Note 80. July How to Use the World s Smallest 24-Bit No Latency Delta-Sigma TM ADC to its Fullest Potential AN80-1

APPLICATION NOTE 6071 CHOOSE THE RIGHT REGULATOR FOR THE RIGHT JOB: PART 3, COMPONENT SELECTION

User s Manual ISL71218MEVAL1Z. User s Manual: Evaluation Board. High Reliability Space

Maxim > Design Support > Technical Documents > Application Notes > Wireless and RF > APP 3571

Precision INSTRUMENTATION AMPLIFIER

New Technique Accurately Measures Low-Frequency Distortion To <-130 dbc Levels by Xavier Ramus, Applications Engineer, Texas Instruments Incorporated

Keywords: ISM, RF, transmitter, short-range, RFIC, switching power amplifier, ETSI

MCP3909. Energy Metering IC with SPI Interface and Active Power Pulse Output. Features. Description. Package Type

LED Driver Specifications

Industry s First 0.8µV RMS Noise LDO Has 79dB Power Supply Rejection Ratio at 1MHz Amit Patel

LF411 Low Offset, Low Drift JFET Input Operational Amplifier

EUA2011A. Low EMI, Ultra-Low Distortion, 2.5-W Mono Filterless Class-D Audio Power Amplifier DESCRIPTION FEATURES APPLICATIONS

Figure 1: Closed Loop System

Increasing Performance Requirements and Tightening Cost Constraints

PART. MAX7401CSA 0 C to +70 C 8 SO MAX7405EPA MAX7401ESA MAX7405CSA MAX7405CPA MAX7405ESA V SUPPLY CLOCK

Using High Speed Differential Amplifiers to Drive Analog to Digital Converters

EUA W Mono Filterless Class-D Audio Power Amplifier DESCRIPTION FEATURES APPLICATIONS. Typical Application Circuit

LF442 Dual Low Power JFET Input Operational Amplifier

EECS40 RLC Lab guide

Energy Metering IC with SPI Interface and Active Power Pulse Output. 24-Lead SSOP HPF HPF1. Serial Control And Output Buffers HPF1

BA Features. General Description. Applications. Marking Information. 3W Mono Filterless Class D Audio Power Amplifier

Low Cost, General Purpose High Speed JFET Amplifier AD825

Chapter 16 PCB Layout and Stackup

Input Stage Concerns. APPLICATION NOTE 656 Design Trade-Offs for Single-Supply Op Amps

REFERENCE DESIGN 4669 INCLUDES:

Very Low Distortion, Precision Difference Amplifier AD8274

APPLICATION NOTE 695 New ICs Revolutionize The Sensor Interface

Keywords: GPS, receiver, GPS receiver, MAX2769, 2769, 1575MHz, Integrated GPS Receiver, Global Positioning System

Features. Applications SOT-23-5

LF412 Low Offset, Low Drift Dual JFET Input Operational Amplifier

Pre-Lab. Introduction

LF353 Wide Bandwidth Dual JFET Input Operational Amplifier

MCP3909. Energy Metering IC with SPI Interface and Active Power Pulse Output. Features. Description. Package Type. Functional Block Diagram

Low Power. Video Op Amp with Disable AD810 REV. A. Closed-Loop Gain and Phase vs. Frequency, G = +2, R L = 150, R F = 715 Ω

LM13700 Dual Operational Transconductance Amplifiers with Linearizing Diodes and Buffers

Understanding the ADC Input on the MSC12xx

Homework Assignment 03

Single Supply, MicroPower INSTRUMENTATION AMPLIFIER

EE233 Autumn 2016 Electrical Engineering University of Washington. EE233 HW7 Solution. Nov. 16 th. Due Date: Nov. 23 rd

PART. MAX7421CUA 0 C to +70 C 8 µmax INPUT CLOCK

CHAPTER 6: ALTERNATING CURRENT

Tabor Electronics Signal Amplifiers. Quick Start Guide

LM13700 Dual Operational Transconductance Amplifiers with Linearizing Diodes and Buffers

MP1496 High-Efficiency, 2A, 16V, 500kHz Synchronous, Step-Down Converter

Improved Second Source to the EL2020 ADEL2020

Precision OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER

Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology Thammasat University

PowerAmp Design. PowerAmp Design PAD112 HIGH VOLTAGE OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER

Conventional Single-Switch Forward Converter Design

EE12: Laboratory Project (Part-2) AM Transmitter

MP1495 High Efficiency 3A, 16V, 500kHz Synchronous Step Down Converter

Principles of Analog In-Circuit Testing

Single Supply, Rail to Rail Low Power FET-Input Op Amp AD820

OBSOLETE. Low Cost Quad Voltage Controlled Amplifier SSM2164 REV. 0

APPLICATION NOTE 3942 Optimize the Buffer Amplifier/ADC Connection

HM8113B. 3A,4.5V-16V Input,500kHz Synchronous Step-Down Converter FEATURES GENERAL DESCRIPTION APPLICATIONS TYPICAL APPLICATION

MP2115 2A Synchronous Step-Down Converter with Programmable Input Current Limit

Chapter 13 Oscillators and Data Converters

16-Bit, Low-Power, 2-Channel, Sigma-Delta ADC MX7705

200 ma Output Current High-Speed Amplifier AD8010

13.56MHz Antennas APPLICATION-NOTE. OBID i-scan. Construction and tuning of 13.56MHz antennas for Reader power levels up to 1W

TS mA / 1.5MHz Synchronous Buck Converter

Contents. CALIBRATION PROCEDURE NI PXIe-5668R 14 GHz and 26.5 GHz Signal Analyzer

Glossary of VCO terms

PowerAmp Design. PowerAmp Design PAD117A RAIL TO RAIL OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER

EE301 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS CHAPTER 2 : OSCILLATORS. Lecturer : Engr. Muhammad Muizz Bin Mohd Nawawi

KH300 Wideband, High-Speed Operational Amplifier

Noise and Interference, the Lock-In Amplifier, (and the IV-meetkast) ( )

HT32 Series Crystal Oscillator, ADC Design Note and PCB Layout Guide

High-Speed, Low-Power Dual Operational Amplifier AD826

PowerAmp Design. PowerAmp Design PAD541 COMPACT POWER OP AMP

APPLICATION NOTE 3671 Data Slicing Techniques for UHF ASK Receivers

Keywords: No-opto flyback, synchronous flyback converter, peak current mode controller

Very Low Distortion, Dual-Channel, High Precision Difference Amplifier AD8274 FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM +V S FEATURES APPLICATIONS GENERAL DESCRIPTION

CMOS 12-Bit Serial Input Multiplying DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTER

XR-215A Monolithic Phase Locked Loop

HA-2520, HA MHz, High Slew Rate, Uncompensated, High Input Impedance, Operational Amplifiers. Features. Applications. Ordering Information

Radio Frequency Electronics

250 MHz, General Purpose Voltage Feedback Op Amps AD8047/AD8048

Evaluation Board Analog Output Functions and Characteristics

Micropower, Single-Supply, Rail-to-Rail, Precision Instrumentation Amplifiers MAX4194 MAX4197

LM148/LM248/LM348 Quad 741 Op Amps

LF444 Quad Low Power JFET Input Operational Amplifier

OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER PREPARED BY, PROF. CHIRAG H. RAVAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR NIRMA UNIVRSITY

OBSOLETE. High Accuracy 1 g to 5 g Single Axis imems Accelerometer with Analog Input ADXL105*

High Accuracy 1 g to 5 g Single Axis imems Accelerometer with Analog Input ADXL105*

Physics 310 Lab 2 Circuit Transients and Oscilloscopes

FSK DEMODULATOR / TONE DECODER

Ultralow Distortion, Wide Bandwidth Voltage Feedback Op Amps AD9631/AD9632

Wideband, High Output Current, Fast Settling Op Amp AD842

LM9040 Dual Lambda Sensor Interface Amplifier

1-Input/4-Output Video Distribution Amplifiers MAX4137/MAX4138

Filters And Waveform Shaping

High Precision OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIERS

High Speed FET-Input INSTRUMENTATION AMPLIFIER

Transcription:

Maxim > Design Support > Technical Documents > Application Notes > Energy Measurement & Metering > APP 5292 Keywords: metering IC, analog input, filter, component selection, LPF, ferrites, capacitors, inverter, solar, interharmonics, noise rejection, lowpass filter, RF noise APPLICATION NOTE 5292 External Filters for the Analog Inputs of Metering ICs By: JP Junker Jun 04, 2012 Abstract: This application note examines ways to reduce adverse side effects, such as crosstalk and inaccuracies, in the Maxim portfolio of Teridian energy metering ICs. After briefly reviewing the ADC inputs, this article discusses the effect of different capacitors and resistors on metering ICs, as well as the use of ferrite beads to reduce RF susceptibility. Introduction This application note discusses the design of external filters connected to the analog inputs of the Maxim portfolio of Teridian energy metering ICs. In most cases, these external filters will be lowpass filters that help reject highfrequency signals, such as noise from photovoltaic inverters. Precautions for filter design and component selections are discussed. Following these guidelines will ensure that unwanted side effects such as crosstalk, inaccuracy over temperature, or phase shift with load currents are avoided. Basic ADC Input Concepts The ADC inputs of the Teridian 71M6531/71M6532/71M6533/71M6534 family of ICs are multiplexed to an unbuffered, switched capacitor network. Figure 1 shows an ideal simplified equivalent circuit of this network when the multiplexed switches are closed on one input. There are two clocks (θ1 and θ2) driving the switches (P1 and P2) that are 180 degrees out of phase. Figure 1. Simplified equivalent circuit of a switched capacitor input network. Page 1 of 10

When P2 closes, P1 opens and the capacitor (C) charges to the input level of V IN. The converse occurs when P2 opens and P1 closes, namely the capacitance charge is transferred to the FIR filter represented as V OUT. Because the frequency of the clocks is approximately 5MHz, the transfer ideally should occur within approximately 2/(5MHz). Maxim recommends using a 1000pF capacitor at the ADC inputs to act as a "charge" reservoir to facilitate this transfer. In addition, Maxim recommends using a series resistor on the phase current ADC inputs to balance the 750Ω termination resistor on the divider string of the phase voltage resistor. Maxim uses 750Ω resistors in demo boards as illustrated in Figure 2. More detailed image. (PDF, 304kB) Figure 2. Circuits of demo board voltage and current input. Figure 3 shows the effects of the components on the switched capacitor equivalent circuit. It includes the impedance of the input multiplexer and P2 switches. Figure 3. Switched capacitor network with RC Input. See Equation 1 for the voltage on the switched capacitor (C) when P2 is closed and P1 is open. The design goal is for VC to settle by approximately 5 tau before the switch P1 closes. If it does not settle, the effect becomes a gain offset in the A/D channel. This gain offset can be compensated for by magnitude calibration as long as the offset does not exceed a factor of two (i.e., the range of the CAL_Ix and CAL_Vx). (Eq. 1) A lowpass filter, if needed or desired, can replace the balance resistor and reservoir capacitor. The concepts of the switched capacitor network ADC input discussed above contribute to understanding the selection of this resistor and the capacitor values for ADC accuracy. Page 2 of 10

Selecting the Type of Capacitor Depending on the use of the component, the type of capacitor selected can be an important factor. If the capacitor performs as a reservoir capacitor to facilitate the charge transfer in the switched capacitor network, then using an X7R-type capacitor is acceptable. This reservoir capacitor, which uses the recommended Maxim values (1000pF and 750Ω), and the impedance-balancing resistor comprise the lowpass filter. This lowpass filter forms a 212kHz, 3dB frequency point that has extremely small influence on the frequency response of interest, typically up to the 20th harmonic of the fundamental frequency. If an anti-aliasing filter or a filter to reject higher frequency noise is being used (generally a low pass filter), these filter types typically form a lower 3dB frequency point that affects the fundamental frequency gain and phase. In these cases, selection of the circuit components is more critical. Because of its characteristics, an NPO-type capacitor would be a better choice for the capacitor. It is more stable over temperatures than an X7R-type capacitor, typically ±30ppm/ C vs. ±15% (±883ppm/ C over -55 C to +125 C). Additionally, the low AC frequency and voltage characteristics of the NPO-type capacitor are better than the X7Rtype capacitor. Figure 4 shows the effect of a 50Hz, small amplitude signal on both the NPO-type and X7R-type capacitors. The NPO-type capacitors that were tested have nearly identical responses, but the X7R-type capacitors show a voltage coefficient. This change of capacitance is a source of inaccuracy in Wh over phase as meter load current changes. Figure 4. The effect of a 50Hz amplitude signal on NPO-type and X7R-type capacitors. Figure 5 shows this inaccuracy as a percent change of capacitance. To illustrate this effect, consider a typical 200A RMS meter using current transformers (CTs) that is calibrated at 30A RMS for magnitude and phase at room temperature. If the AC voltage from a CT sensor with a burden resistor at the current ADC input is 0.177V RMS at 200A RMS, then the AC voltage of a 200A RMS meter calibrated at 30A RMS is 0.027V RMS.The change of capacitance is approximately 1.5%. This difference becomes an uncompensated phase shift on the current channels and a source of inaccuracy in Wh readings when the power factor (PF) changes from 1.0 to 0.5. Page 3 of 10

Figure 5. Inaccuracy due to capacitance drift. Finally, the NPO-type capacitor has better aging characteristics than the X7R-type capacitor. Figure 6 shows that the X7R capacitance decreases over time. This decrease is caused by the relaxation or realignment of the electrical dipoles within the capacitor. The NPO-type capacitor does not experience this phenomenon. Figure 6. The effects of aging capacitors. Selecting the Type of Resistor The type of resistor selected for either the balance resistor or the lowpass filter is not as critical as the type of capacitor selected. A 1% resistor can be used for both the balance resistor and the lowpass filter since these are generally low cost and their tolerances are compensated during magnitude calibration. Care should be made to select the best temperature coefficient for the lowpass filter to reduce inaccuracies in Wh accuracy over temperature. Page 4 of 10

RF Rejection Filters One of the biggest challenges facing meter design is RF susceptibility. With the advent of more powerful radio devices for automatic meter reading (AMR) within the power meter, RF fields in the proximity of the metering ICs have increased beyond the levels listed in metering standards. To reject these RF fields, many meter designers use ferrite beads to essentially "burn off" this RF energy. The typical approach is to place ferrite beads at the points where the phase voltage and phase currents enter the printed circuit boards (PCBs) to "burn off" the RF energy before it can enter any circuitry. However, there seems to be a design trend of placing ferrite beads further down line and in some cases, right at the ADC input of the metering ICs. This trend may be due to RF energy still entering into the circuitry of the PCB because of the antenna position. Maxim has found that placing the ferrite bead directly in series with the ADC input of the 71M653X causes inaccuracies in Wh readings over temperature. These inaccuracies are caused by the interaction of the ferrite bead inductance with the switched capacitor network. The ferrite bead is modeled as an inductance and a resistance. Figure 7 shows the simplified equivalent circuit of the switched capacitor network, which includes a ferrite bead model. Figure 7. Simplified equivalent circuit of the switched capacitor network with ferrite bead. When P2 is closed and P1 is open, the model becomes a classic RLC circuit. Equations 2, 3, and 4 show the current loop calculations for this circuit. (Eq. 2) Where (Eq. 3) And the damping factor is (Eq. 4) Page 5 of 10

The value of the damping factor determines the behavior of the current. If δ > 1, i.e., over damped, then calculate (Eq. 5) If δ = 1, i.e., critical damped, then calculate i(t) = D 1 te -αt + D 2 e -αt (Eq. 6) If δ < 1, i.e., under damped, then calculate i(t) = B 1 e -αt (cosω d t) + B 1 e -αt (sinω d t) (Eq. 7) And (Eq. 8) To calculate the damping factor value, the L and R of the ferrite at the signal frequency need to be determined. Figure 8 shows the characteristics of the Murata BLM15HD102SN1D as an example. The L is approximately 1µH and R = 0.1Ω (use DC resistance for this discussion) in the 50Hz to 60Hz range. Figure 8. Example characteristics to calculate the dampening factor value. With these values and R SW = 50Ω, the damping factor is 0.08, i.e., under damped. Figure 9 shows the decaying oscillatory response of this under damped response in the bottom signal. Page 6 of 10

Figure 9. Switched capacitor voltage with ferrite bead at ADC input. In Figure 9, the single-ended ADC input is 0.25V. The red signal is P1. The blue signal is the voltage across the switched capacitor (C) with L = 1µH, R = 0.1Ω, R SW = 50Ω, and C = 10pF. The green signal is the voltage across the switched capacitor (C) with L = 2µH, R = 0.1Ω, R SW = 50Ω, and C = 10pF. Note that when the L value changes over temperature from 1µH to 2µH, the response changes. The resultant offset value is different from what was magnitude compensated at room temperature and produces an inaccuracy in the Wh readings even at PF = 1. Because of this effect, Maxim recommends not placing ferrite beads directly in series with the ADC input. If using a ferrite bead near the metering IC, Maxim recommends placing it before the balance resistor and reservoir capacitor (see Figure 10). Page 7 of 10

Figure 10. Recommended ferrite bead placement near ADC input. Figure 11 shows the effect of this placement in the top signal. The response dampens quickly before P1 is closed. An alternative method would be to place a resistor between the ferrite bead and the ADC input and to change the damping factor. Page 8 of 10

Figure 11. Switched capacitor voltage with ferrite bead and RC at ADC input. In Figure 11, the single-ended ADC input is 0.25V. The red signal is P2. The blue signal is the voltage across the switched capacitor (C) with L = 1µH, R = 750Ω, and C = 1000pF. Conclusion Because of the unbuffered switched capacitor network, care must be taken when selecting components for filters that interface with the ADC inputs of the Maxim portfolio of the Teridian energy metering ICs. Proper selection will avoid side effects such as crosstalk, inaccuracy over temperature, or inaccuracy due to additional phase shift over load currents. Teridian is a trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. Related Parts 71M6531D Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6531F Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6532D Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6532F Energy Meter ICs Free Samples Page 9 of 10

71M6533 Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6533H Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6534 Energy Meter ICs Free Samples 71M6534H Energy Meter ICs Free Samples More Information For Technical Support: http://www.maximintegrated.com/support For Samples: http://www.maximintegrated.com/samples Other Questions and Comments: http://www.maximintegrated.com/contact Application Note 5292: http://www.maximintegrated.com/an5292 APPLICATION NOTE 5292, AN5292, AN 5292, APP5292, Appnote5292, Appnote 5292 Copyright by Maxim Integrated Products Additional Legal Notices: http://www.maximintegrated.com/legal Page 10 of 10