Below is a thermostat circuit I recently built to control a 1300 watt space heater.
The heater element (not shown) is connected in series with two back to back 16 amp
SCRs (not shown) which are controlled with a small pulse transformer. The pulse
transformer has 3 identical windings, two of which are used to supply trigger
pulses to the SCRs, and the third winding is connected to a PNP transistor pair
that alternately supply pulses to the transformer at the beginning of each AC
half cycle. The trigger pulses are applied to both SCRs near the beginning of
each AC half cycle but only one conducts depending on the AC polarity.
DC power for the circuit is shown in the lower left section of the drawing
and uses a 1.25uF, 400 volt non-polarized capacitor to obtain about 50mA
of current from the AC line. The current is rectified by 2 diodes and used to
charge a couple larger low voltage capacitors (3300uF) which provide about
6 volts DC for the circuit. The DC voltage is regulated by the 6.2 volt zener
and the 150 ohm resistor in series with the line limits the surge current when
power is first applied.
The lower comparator (output at pin 13) serves as a zero crossing detector
and produces a 60 Hz square wave in phase with the AC line. The phase is
shifted slightly by the 0.33 uF, 220K and 1K network so that the SCR
trigger pulse arrives when the line voltage is a few volts above or below
zero. The SCRs will not trigger at exactly zero since there will be no
voltage to maintain conduction.
The upper two comparators operate in same manner as described in the
"Electronic thermostat and relay" circuit. A low level at pin 2 is
produced when the temperature is above the desired level and inhibits
the square wave at pin 13 and prevents triggering of the SCRs. When
the temperature drops below the desired level, pin 2 will move to an
open circuit condition allowing the square wave at pin 13 to trigger
the SCRs.
The comparator near the center of the drawing (pins 8,9,14) is used
to allow the heater to be manually run for a few minutes and automatically
shut off. A momentary toggle switch (shown connected to a 51 ohm resistor)
is used to discharge the 1000uF capacitor so that pin 2 of the upper
comparator moves to a open circuit state allowing the 60 Hz square wave
to trigger the SCRs and power the heater. When the capacitor reaches
about 4 volts the circuit returns to normal operation where the
thermistor controls the operation. The momentary switch can also be
toggled so that the capacitor charges above 4 volts and shuts off the
heater if the temperature is above the setting of the pot.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar