Source: Ali Bazzi, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT.
Similar to diodes, thyristors, also called silicon controlled rectifiers (SCRs), pass current in one direction from the anode to cathode, and block current flow in the other direction. However, current passage can be controlled through a "gate" terminal, which requires a small current pulse to turn on the thyristor so it can start conducting.
Thyristors are four-layer devices, composed of alternating layers of n-type and p-type material, thereby forming PNPN structures with three junctions. The thyristor has three terminals; with the anode connected to the p-type material of the PNPN structure, the cathode connected to the n-type layer, and the gate connected to the p-type layer nearest the cathode.
The objective of this experiment is to study a controlled thyristor-based half-wave rectifier at different conditions, and understand how different timings of the gate pulse affect the DC output voltage.
The thyristor only conducts under the same conditions as a diode, in addition to the condition of having a gate pulse to trigger the conduction process. For example, if an AC source is connected in series with a thyristor and a resistive load, the positive half-cycle of the source is not enough to forward bias the thyristor; the thyristor will remain reverse biased or off until a gate pulse is applied. It will then start conducting during that half-cycle. Thus, the thyristor has three terminals, the anode (A), cathode (K), and gate (G). Gate pulses are generated by "gate drive" circuits that drive current into the gate. The delay between the AC source zero crossing the gate pulse command is termed the "firing angle" which is an electrical angle.
Fig.1 shows a simple half-wave thyristor rectifier circuit with a pulse generating circuit (R1, R2, D1, D2, and C) that generates current pulses at the thyristor's gate. When the pulse is available and is "fired" at a firing angle which is a certain delay period from the zero crossing of the input voltage Vin, the thyristor acts like a diode in terms of passing current in one direction. Once the current goes to zero and the gate pulse is not available, the thyristor will remain off until the current is positive again and a gate pulse is fired.
In this experiment, we will study a controlled thyristor-based half-wave rectifier at different firing angles. The average output voltages for different angles are compared to study the effect of controlling the turn-on time on the average DC output voltage.
Figure 1: Half-wave rectifier with SCR and resistive load.
ATTENTION: During this experiment, do not touch any part of the circuit while energized. Do NOT ground the VARIAC.
For this experiment, the variable transformer (VARIAC) at a low frequency of 60 Hz and peak of 35 V is used as the main AC source.
1. Setup
2. Half-Wave Rectifier SCR Circuit with Resistive Load and Zero Firing Angle
Figure 2: Pin assignment of the SCR.
3. Half-Wave Rectifier SCR Circuit with Resistive Load and Non-Zero Firing Angle
Two different resistors will be used as R2. The values should be between 100 and 1000 Ω. The resistance can read the resistance color code, or measured with a digital multimeter.
The AC input voltage waveform is chopped until the firing angle. Important relationships of the average output voltage and firing angles for different SCR rectifiers with input Vin= V0 cos(ωt) are:
• Single SCR and R load: <Vout>=V0[1+cos(α)]/(2π) (2)
• SCR bridge and R load: <Vout>= V0[1+cos(α)]/π (3)
• SCR bridge, current source load: <Vout>=2V0 cos(α)/π (4)
As the firing angle increases, the mean or DC voltage at the output decreases as the output voltage waveform across the resistive load is a chopped version of the input.
SCR's were common in older DC power supplies that required a variable DC output voltage from an AC input. By adjusting the resistor R2 in the above circuit, it is possible to adjust the average Vout and therefor an adjustable DC power supply results. SCRs are not common any more in DC power supplies as they switch at the input line frequency (typically 50 or 60 Hz), and new power supplies switch at 10 s or 100 s of kHz which makes filtering the output voltage to extract the DC component much easier with smaller capacitors. However, SCRs are still common in high voltage inverters where the switching frequency can be low at the line frequency since many high voltage and high current SCR's are available in the market.
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