List of Schematics - AC Power Controls
List of Schematics - AC Power Controls
| CHARGE COUPLED BI-DIRECTIONAL POWER MOSFET RELAY The circuit uses an inexpensive C-MOS inverter package and a few small capacitors to drive tw1o power MOS transistors from a 12v to 15v supply. Since the coupling capacitor values used to drive the FETs are small, the leakage current from the power line into the control circuit is a tiny 4uA. Only about 1.5mA of DC is needed to turn on and off 400 watts of AC or DC power to a load. Published in Electronic Design, Nov. 8, 1990. |
| SOLID STATE RELAY REQUIRES ONLY 50uA DRIVE CURRENT This circuit demands a control current that is 100 times smaller than that needed by a typical optically isolated solid state relays. It is ideal for battery-powered systems. Using a combination of a high current TRIAC and a very sensitive low current SCR, the circuit can control about 600 watts of power to load while providing full isolation and transient protection. Published in Electronic Design, Dec 2, 1996. |
| Circuit level shifts ac signals: AC signals can emanate from many sources, and many of these sources are incompatible with the most popular interface voltages, such as TTL. A temptation always exists to capacitively couple the ac signals because capacitive coupling strips off the dc level. Capacitive coupling sometimes doesn`t work, because the coupled signal`s voltage swings around ground, so you have to add dc offset to make.... |
| Why limit your power supply`s input range?: EDN-Design Ideas / Taking only a cursory look at the input-voltage ratings of your power-supply IC can limit the usable input-voltage range. With careful examination of an IC`s operating specifications and circuit topology, you may be able to work around that input-voltage limitation. |
