Discuss Inrush into 4.3mF capacitor bank in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi,
We have a 4kW PFC we are doing. (100-265VAC, +/-180V)
The input is a Boost PFC...it has 4.3mF of output capacitance.
We want to inrush into it through a resistor, then short out the resistor with a relay.
We want the resistor to be 20 Ohms. Whats the smallest 20r resistor we can use for this.?
We dont want an NTC as they dont work when hot.

We are finding that resistor datasheets give Peak repetitive power pulse ratings, and continuous power ratings, but absolutely nothing which pertains to one-off inrush events.
 
Thanks, but the NTC will be getting hot during the inrush event , and wont present the full 20 Ohms throughout the inrushing time.
That is kind of their whole point! As the bank charges you need less R to limit the current.

Any limiter is going to get hot, at least NTC thermistors are rated for it and to a large degree self-protecting. You can put two lower R ones in series for a bit more energy handling as well.

A zero-crossing SSR is a good choice for shorting out, less dV/dt when it kicks in, and ideally switched from the AC side of the rectifier, maybe with short delay, so a charged bank is not bypassing the NTC for medium term interruptions.
 
OK thanks, thats v good info...the thing is, we want a solid 20R throughout the inrush.....NTC's very quickly loose R and inrush rises more than we want......its impossible to calculate exactly what R an NTC will be giving at what stage of the inrush.....so we just want to back out of NTCs
 
A search for using the PFC inductance, etc, for inrush current limiting comes up with various options. This is an interesting example where the input bridge is dual-use and they suggest using thyristors to progressive charge the reservoir capacitors:

However, complex. Unless already a design example it might be a bit much to just poke around to get working. Also you need to take more care on input EMC filtering here, and probably also bleed resistors for input X capacitor as it might be significant size.
 
I don't think there can be a hard-and-fast general answer. Thermal impulse characteristics vary widely according to the thermal mass, thermal resistance, maximum temperature and maximum temperature gradient of the components of the resistor. This will require detailed information from the manufacturer.

Don't forget to allow for what happens if the relay fails to close! In a xenon lamp rectifier (3kW SMPSU) made in Japan in about 1980, that I repaired last year, there was a dry joint on the PCB in the trigger circuit for the bypass triac - the inrush limiting resistor had gone quietly open-circuit. OTOH on a particular crane power supply if the bypass relay failed the resistor used to explode or catch fire.

Side note; I can never get on with the notation mF. I think the reason is that historically, MFD was used for μF on components and the lazy would sometimes use MF. Illogical though it might be in theory, I would always write 1,000μF for 1mF.
 
I state first that audio amplifiers and their design is not something I am that familiar with. And I stopped playing the piano as a teenager so music is only something I listen to and generally classical music not thumping bass playing or drumming.

The switch on surge current problem is because of the requirement to have capacitors for storage and smoothing. Have you thought about using a battery in their stead? The mains supply is used in this idea only to charge the battery and the battery provides the high power capability in terms of peak power and average power - it deals with the crest factor of the bass playing. The charger provides a current to maintain the battery in a sufficiently charged state for the duration of the performance and is a nice steady waveform which can be slowly ramped up from zero at switch on - thus no difficult switch on surge current. One can also continue to play during a power cut!

Just a thought. :)
 

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