US3681679A - Constant voltage transformer three-phase ferro resonant - Google Patents

Constant voltage transformer three-phase ferro resonant Download PDF

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US3681679A
US3681679A US141191A US3681679DA US3681679A US 3681679 A US3681679 A US 3681679A US 141191 A US141191 A US 141191A US 3681679D A US3681679D A US 3681679DA US 3681679 A US3681679 A US 3681679A
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05FSYSTEMS FOR REGULATING ELECTRIC OR MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G05F3/00Non-retroactive systems for regulating electric variables by using an uncontrolled element, or an uncontrolled combination of elements, such element or such combination having self-regulating properties
    • G05F3/02Regulating voltage or current
    • G05F3/04Regulating voltage or current wherein the variable is ac
    • G05F3/06Regulating voltage or current wherein the variable is ac using combinations of saturated and unsaturated inductive devices, e.g. combined with resonant circuit

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  • ABSTRACT A constant voltage transformer apparatus having two magnetic cores with an input winding linking both cores and an output winding linked to only one of the cores.
  • a resonant circuit is liked to the core having the output winding which core has a flux therein which is the sum of the flux from the input winding and the flux generated by the resonant circuit winding so that this core may be saturated for a constant output in the output winding while the second core is unsaturated and acts to absorb a rise of the input voltage.
  • the symmetry arrangement of the cores and coils makes it especially useful for a multiphase constant voltage transformer.
  • the transformer has an inherent current limiting characteristic and removal of the resonant circuit renders the transformer to be used as a conventional transformer with the added advantage of current limiting.
  • the present invention relates to ferroresonance type constant voltage transformers, especially to such transformers adapted for multiphase use.
  • Ferroresonant constant voltage transformers have been common in the past, but have primarily been of the type disclosed in Solar U.S. Pat. No. 2,143,745, which transformer has been both popularly and extensively used in the industry, which transformer has been satisfactory in singlephase use but cannot be built as an individual single unit to work from a multiphase power source, such as a three-phase source where often a high power output may be demanded. It has been used by combining several single-phase transformers of this prior art type .operated from a multiphase source such as three-phase output whereby three separate singlephase units are connected to operate from the multiphase source. This, however, results in the disadvantages of only certain or limited types of schemes of multiphase connections that are thereby possible, and the system so formed is susceptible to instability and oscillation. This type of arrangement also becomes expensive and bulky.
  • Another Solar U.S. Pat. No. 2,694,177 provides for a ferroresonant transformer providing near perfect sinusoidac output, providing an improvement over the previous constant voltage transformer.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 2,973,470 for voltage regulator provides a voltage regulator utilizing two cores one of which is saturated for all values of load current, while the other core is non-saturated when the load current is and saturated when full load current is being delivered.
  • the voltage regulator depends upon a variation of a saturable corereactor and parallel with a capacitor to produce resonance or near resonance as a load and the applied voltage are varied.
  • One object of the present invention is to provide a ferroresonant constant voltage transformer that can be built economically by employing readily available cores and using conventional winding methods.
  • the present invention relates to ferroresonant constant voltage transformers having first and second magnetic cores with an input winding linking both cores.
  • One core has an output winding linked thereto along with a resonant circuit having a resonany winding and a capacitance.
  • the first core is designed so that a flux therein will be equal to the sum of the primary flux from the input circuit and a secondary flux generated by the resonant circuit so that this core will remain saturated in normal operation and will have the output winding linked thereto for a constant output.
  • the second core will be linked only to the input winding and will not normally be in a saturated condition and will thereby act to absorb the rise of the input voltage when the first core is saturated and act to limit the excessive input current should a short develop at the output.
  • the transformer has a symmetry structure which makes it especially useful in multiphase constant voltage transformer operation.
  • FIG. 1 shows schematic diagram of the equivalent circuit of a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transfonner in accordance with the present invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a sectional view of a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer in accordance with the embodiment of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a schematic diagram of an equivalent three-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer in accordance with the present invention
  • FIG. 4 is a sectional view illustrating the relationship between the cores and windings of a three-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer.
  • FIG. 5 is a toroidal core winding arrangement for a three-phase transfonner in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 of the drawings a ferroresonant constant voltage transformer 10 is illustrated for operation in a single-phase mode.
  • An alternating input voltage is applied across a pair of terminals 11 and 12 of an input winding 13 of the transformer 10 which input winding 13 links a pair of cores l4 and 15 applying a flux density 4.44fNA in each core, where E is the applied voltage, f is the frequency, N is the number of turns of input winding, and A is the total core area linked by the total input turns.
  • (1)14 is the flux that exists in core 14 B14 is the flux density in core 14 A14 is the cross section area of core 14 (#15 is the flux existing in core 15 B15 is the flux density in core 15 A15 is the cross section area of core 15
  • the transformer action will induce a voltage across terminals l6 and 17 of a resonant winding 18 causing a current to flow in the resonant capacitor 20 resulting in a secondary flux dzs because of the resonance in the circuit 21 having resonant winding 18 and a capacitance 20.
  • This secondary flux is derived from a capacitive current which is in time phase with the primary flux p which secondary flux s exists in core 15 only, as
  • Np X Ip Ns X Is Np X Is
  • Ip the magnetizing current due to energizing input winding
  • Ns the number of turns of resonant winding
  • Is the current in the resonant winding.
  • the selection of the proper combination and correct values for the cores 14 and 15 and the turns on the input winding 13, turns on the resonant winding 18 and resonant circuit capacitor 20 allows transformer core 15 to reach saturation of its magnetization curve while core 14 is still far from being saturated.
  • the object is to design the transformer in which the core 15 becomes saturated during that portion of the input voltage required for the output voltage to be regulated.
  • the flux in core 15 should be determined so that core 15 will be saturated at slightly below 80 volts. Further increases of the input voltage from 80 volts on up to 130 volts will produce essentially little or no change in flux in core 15 since it has already become saturated.
  • the impedance of core 14 should be as such it will absorb the additional flux in the input voltage rise from 80 to 130 volts in this particular example.
  • An output or load winding 22 links only with the saturated core 15 and has a voltage induced therein whose peak amplitude B may be expressed by constant since (d/dt) constant where f is the frequency N is the number of turns output winding A is the cross-section area of core 15 B is the flux density in core 15 K is 4.44 f N
  • Core 14 acts to absorb the rise of the input voltage when core 15 is saturated, and the impedance of core 14 also acts to limit the excessive input current should a short develop at the output and hence the transformer becomes an inherent current limiting device.
  • a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer has been provided but the concept of the invention provides a symmetry structure which is essential to a multiphase constant voltage transformer, and as can be seen in connection with FIGS. 3 and 4, a three-phase constant voltage transformer can be easily adapted from the single-phase transformer concept.
  • each coil 32, 33 and 34 will of course be identical with the design of each coil, including the computation of winding turns, core area, and resonant values, based on the analysis of the transformer performing in a single-phase mode as if building three identical single-phase transformers, except that each coil is assembled onto one legof the three-phase core structure having cores 30 and 31.
  • each core has a resonant winding 35, an output or load winding 36, an input winding 37, with the windings 35, 36 and 37 all being associated with core 31 but only the input winding 37 being associated with core 30, as has been previously described.
  • the equivalent electrical schematic diagram of FIG. ,4 illustrates a three-phase source applied across 40, 41 and 42 of the three-phase connected input wiring 43.
  • the phenomenon that has been described in detail in connection with the single-phase mode of operation now exists in each leg 44, 45 and 46 of the three-phase coil structure, the single-phase having provided a symmetry structure which is essential to a multiphase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer, which acts on the cores 30 and 31 as has already been described for a single-phase transformer.
  • a three-phase output is generated in the terminals 46, 47 and 48 of the three phase output windings 40 having legs 51, 52 and 53 connected to an output load 59.
  • Three-phase resonant circuit 54 has the three-phase resonant windings 55 having three legs 56, 57 and 58 connected by means of conductors 60, 61 and 62 to the resonant capacitance circuit 63 in three capacitance legs 64, 65 and 66 with all the computations and winding schemes that apply to conventional multiphase or three-phase design, also applying to the present transformer as will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.
  • FIG. 5 another embodiment is illustrated having toroidal cores and a three-phase winding arrangement, with three toroidal cores 70 and three toroidal cores 71 and a three-phase input winding 72 linked to cores 70 and 71 of each leg and with a threephase output winding 73 connected to each core 71 along with the resonant winding 74 linking it to toroidal core 71.
  • This portion of the circuit illustrates the operation of a three-phase toroidal core winding without illustrating the complete resonance circuit as has been previously described.
  • Quantity Input winding Magnet wire 34 AWG 1 ISO tums/coil Resonant winding Magnet wire 38 AWG 2800 tums/coil Output winding Magnet wire 26 AWG I96 tums/coil Resonant capacitor Sprague oiled filled luf, 660 VAC 3 units Core No. 30 El 9/16 3 29 Gauge Grain Oriented Silicon Steel 5/8 inch thick Core No.
  • a ferroresonant type of constant voltage transformer has been illustrated for use in single-phase and threephase operation, but it should be clear that because of the symmetry of transformer any phase can be used as desired, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. It is also anticipated that other embodiments and equivalents are within the scope of the invention including the use of inherent current limiting transformer features by the elimination of the resonant circuit.
  • a constant voltage transformer comprising in combination:
  • first magnetic core linked to each said input winding and adapted to absorb flux during an input voltage rise in said input windings
  • a resonance circuit having a plurality of resonant windings coupled to at least one capacitance, each said resonant winding being linked to said second magnetic core and said resonance circuit being adapted to produce a resonance for producing secondary flux in said second magnetic core from capacitance current in said resonant circuit, said current being in time phase with the primary flux of the second core to produce an increase in the flux of said second core means whereby said second core will be saturated while said first core is still unsaturated; and a plurality of output windings linked to said second magnetic core for producing a substantially constant voltage output.
  • a multiple-phase constant voltage ferroresonant transformer having a symmetry structure comprising in combination:
  • resonant circuit means having a plurality of resonant windings each coupled only with said second core

Abstract

A constant voltage transformer apparatus having two magnetic cores with an input winding linking both cores and an output winding linked to only one of the cores. A resonant circuit is liked to the core having the output winding which core has a flux therein which is the sum of the flux from the input winding and the flux generated by the resonant circuit winding so that this core may be saturated for a constant output in the output winding while the second core is unsaturated and acts to absorb a rise of the input voltage. The symmetry arrangement of the cores and coils makes it especially useful for a multiphase constant voltage transformer. The transformer has an inherent current limiting characteristic and removal of the resonant circuit renders the transformer to be used as a conventional transformer with the added advantage of current limiting.

Description

United States Patent Chung [54] CONSTANT VOLTAGE TRANSFORMER THREE-PHASE FERRO RESONANT [72] Inventor: Khcemoy Chung, Apartment 38,
Kingswood Apartments, 1101 Lee Road, Orlando, Fla. 32810 [58] Field of Search ..323/48, 49, 50, 56, 60,61, 323/6; 336/155, 5, 170
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,753,513 7/1956 Sola ..323/48 3,579,088 5/1971 Fletcher et al ..323/6 3,041,523 6/1962 [451 Aug. 1,1972
Primary Examiner-Gerald Goldberg Att0m'ey-Duckworth & Hobby l5 7] ABSTRACT A constant voltage transformer apparatus having two magnetic cores with an input winding linking both cores and an output winding linked to only one of the cores. A resonant circuit is liked to the core having the output winding which core has a flux therein which is the sum of the flux from the input winding and the flux generated by the resonant circuit winding so that this core may be saturated for a constant output in the output winding while the second core is unsaturated and acts to absorb a rise of the input voltage. The symmetry arrangement of the cores and coils makes it especially useful for a multiphase constant voltage transformer. The transformer has an inherent current limiting characteristic and removal of the resonant circuit renders the transformer to be used as a conventional transformer with the added advantage of current limiting.
5 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures LOAD WINDING I WINDING PATENTED N973 3.681.679
" 1 FIG! ,|a F162 '5 mi 0? I8 rs t CORE 1 (i3 fl' q ii 20 :0 5 I4 CORE 5 m l2 LOAD WINDING 32 WINDING INVENTOR. KHEEMOY CHUNG ATTORNEYS.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to ferroresonance type constant voltage transformers, especially to such transformers adapted for multiphase use.
Ferroresonant constant voltage transformers have been common in the past, but have primarily been of the type disclosed in Solar U.S. Pat. No. 2,143,745, which transformer has been both popularly and extensively used in the industry, which transformer has been satisfactory in singlephase use but cannot be built as an individual single unit to work from a multiphase power source, such as a three-phase source where often a high power output may be demanded. It has been used by combining several single-phase transformers of this prior art type .operated from a multiphase source such as three-phase output whereby three separate singlephase units are connected to operate from the multiphase source. This, however, results in the disadvantages of only certain or limited types of schemes of multiphase connections that are thereby possible, and the system so formed is susceptible to instability and oscillation. This type of arrangement also becomes expensive and bulky.
It is accordingly one object of the present invention to provide a single unit multiphase ferroresonany constant voltage transformer, without any restriction to the scheme of the multiphase connection that may be desired.
Another Solar U.S. Pat. No. 2,694,177, provides for a ferroresonant transformer providing near perfect sinusoidac output, providing an improvement over the previous constant voltage transformer.
Another prior art patent, U.S. Pat. No. 2,973,470, for voltage regulator provides a voltage regulator utilizing two cores one of which is saturated for all values of load current, while the other core is non-saturated when the load current is and saturated when full load current is being delivered. In this patent the voltage regulator depends upon a variation of a saturable corereactor and parallel with a capacitor to produce resonance or near resonance as a load and the applied voltage are varied.
One object of the present invention is to provide a ferroresonant constant voltage transformer that can be built economically by employing readily available cores and using conventional winding methods.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a ferroresonant constant voltage transformer with an inherent current limiting characteristic should a short develop at the output and which transformer can be used as an ordinary conventional transformer with the added advantage of its inherent current limiting characteristics.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to ferroresonant constant voltage transformers having first and second magnetic cores with an input winding linking both cores. One core has an output winding linked thereto along with a resonant circuit having a resonany winding and a capacitance. The first core is designed so that a flux therein will be equal to the sum of the primary flux from the input circuit and a secondary flux generated by the resonant circuit so that this core will remain saturated in normal operation and will have the output winding linked thereto for a constant output. The second core, however, will be linked only to the input winding and will not normally be in a saturated condition and will thereby act to absorb the rise of the input voltage when the first core is saturated and act to limit the excessive input current should a short develop at the output. The transformer has a symmetry structure which makes it especially useful in multiphase constant voltage transformer operation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Other objects, features and advantages of this invention will be apparent from a study of the written description and the drawings in which:
FIG. 1 shows schematic diagram of the equivalent circuit of a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transfonner in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2 shows a sectional view of a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer in accordance with the embodiment of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 illustrates a schematic diagram of an equivalent three-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view illustrating the relationship between the cores and windings of a three-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer; and
FIG. 5 is a toroidal core winding arrangement for a three-phase transfonner in accordance with the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2 of the drawings, a ferroresonant constant voltage transformer 10 is illustrated for operation in a single-phase mode. An alternating input voltage is applied across a pair of terminals 11 and 12 of an input winding 13 of the transformer 10 which input winding 13 links a pair of cores l4 and 15 applying a flux density 4.44fNA in each core, where E is the applied voltage, f is the frequency, N is the number of turns of input winding, and A is the total core area linked by the total input turns. The excitation or primary flux p can be expressed by B X A and at any instant the primary flux existing in core 14 will be found in 14 B14 X A14 and in core 15 will bel5=Bl5 Al5,where:
(1)14 is the flux that exists in core 14 B14 is the flux density in core 14 A14 is the cross section area of core 14 (#15 is the flux existing in core 15 B15 is the flux density in core 15 A15 is the cross section area of core 15 The transformer action will induce a voltage across terminals l6 and 17 of a resonant winding 18 causing a current to flow in the resonant capacitor 20 resulting in a secondary flux dzs because of the resonance in the circuit 21 having resonant winding 18 and a capacitance 20. This secondary flux is derived from a capacitive current which is in time phase with the primary flux p which secondary flux s exists in core 15 only, as
distinguished from the flux generated by the input winding 13 which is in core 14 and 15. The result is an addition of flux in core 15. Using Amps Law, the total flux in core 15 may be expressed to be dependent upon the sum of ampere turns. Thus, Np X Ip Ns X Is where Np is the number of turns of input winding, Ip is the magnetizing current due to energizing input winding, Ns is the number of turns of resonant winding, and Is is the current in the resonant winding. Hence, at any instant the amount of flux in core 15 is the sum of the primary flux and the secondary flux 41p 42s whereas the flux that exists at any instant in core 14 is only the primary flux p. The selection of the proper combination and correct values for the cores 14 and 15 and the turns on the input winding 13, turns on the resonant winding 18 and resonant circuit capacitor 20 allows transformer core 15 to reach saturation of its magnetization curve while core 14 is still far from being saturated. The object is to design the transformer in which the core 15 becomes saturated during that portion of the input voltage required for the output voltage to be regulated. Forexample, if it is desired to have the output regulated from an input voltage of 80 volts to 130 volts, the flux in core 15 should be determined so that core 15 will be saturated at slightly below 80 volts. Further increases of the input voltage from 80 volts on up to 130 volts will produce essentially little or no change in flux in core 15 since it has already become saturated. In the meantime the impedance of core 14 should be as such it will absorb the additional flux in the input voltage rise from 80 to 130 volts in this particular example. An output or load winding 22 links only with the saturated core 15 and has a voltage induced therein whose peak amplitude B may be expressed by constant since (d/dt) constant where f is the frequency N is the number of turns output winding A is the cross-section area of core 15 B is the flux density in core 15 K is 4.44 f N A Core 14 acts to absorb the rise of the input voltage when core 15 is saturated, and the impedance of core 14 also acts to limit the excessive input current should a short develop at the output and hence the transformer becomes an inherent current limiting device. As can be seen at this point, a single-phase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer has been provided but the concept of the invention provides a symmetry structure which is essential to a multiphase constant voltage transformer, and as can be seen in connection with FIGS. 3 and 4, a three-phase constant voltage transformer can be easily adapted from the single-phase transformer concept. In actual practice a pair of cores and 31 may be used having three sets of coils or windings 32, 33 and 34 wrapped thereon, each coil 32, 33 and 34 will of course be identical with the design of each coil, including the computation of winding turns, core area, and resonant values, based on the analysis of the transformer performing in a single-phase mode as if building three identical single-phase transformers, except that each coil is assembled onto one legof the three-phase core structure having cores 30 and 31. Thus, each core has a resonant winding 35, an output or load winding 36, an input winding 37, with the windings 35, 36 and 37 all being associated with core 31 but only the input winding 37 being associated with core 30, as has been previously described.
Referring more specifically to FIG. 3, the equivalent electrical schematic diagram of FIG. ,4 illustrates a three-phase source applied across 40, 41 and 42 of the three-phase connected input wiring 43. The phenomenon that has been described in detail in connection with the single-phase mode of operation now exists in each leg 44, 45 and 46 of the three-phase coil structure, the single-phase having provided a symmetry structure which is essential to a multiphase ferroresonant constant voltage transformer, which acts on the cores 30 and 31 as has already been described for a single-phase transformer. A three-phase output is generated in the terminals 46, 47 and 48 of the three phase output windings 40 having legs 51, 52 and 53 connected to an output load 59. Three-phase resonant circuit 54 has the three-phase resonant windings 55 having three legs 56, 57 and 58 connected by means of conductors 60, 61 and 62 to the resonant capacitance circuit 63 in three capacitance legs 64, 65 and 66 with all the computations and winding schemes that apply to conventional multiphase or three-phase design, also applying to the present transformer as will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.
Referring now to FIG. 5, another embodiment is illustrated having toroidal cores and a three-phase winding arrangement, with three toroidal cores 70 and three toroidal cores 71 and a three-phase input winding 72 linked to cores 70 and 71 of each leg and witha threephase output winding 73 connected to each core 71 along with the resonant winding 74 linking it to toroidal core 71. This portion of the circuit illustrates the operation of a three-phase toroidal core winding without illustrating the complete resonance circuit as has been previously described.
It should also be noted at this point that while a thorough resonant constant voltage transformer has been provided, removal of the resonant circuit will produce a conventional transformer which is inherently current limiting and while applicant does not wish to be limited to any particular embodiment, the following values are provided by way of example of one operable model only, and applies to a three-phase transformer as illustrated by the schematic in FIG. 3:
Functional description Material Quantity Input winding Magnet wire 34 AWG 1 ISO tums/coil Resonant winding Magnet wire 38 AWG 2800 tums/coil Output winding Magnet wire 26 AWG I96 tums/coil Resonant capacitor Sprague oiled filled luf, 660 VAC 3 units Core No. 30 El 9/16 3 29 Gauge Grain Oriented Silicon Steel 5/8 inch thick Core No. 31 El 9/16 31 29 Gauge Grain Oriented Silicon Steel 2l/32 inch thick Input connection Delta three-phase Output connection Wye three-phase Resonant connection Wye three-phase Load connection Wye three-phase Input volts RMS Line-Line Terminal 40-4] 155 185 215 4142 42-40 Output volts RMS Line-Line Terminal 46-47 23.00 23.25 23.50 4748 23.00 23.25 23.50 4846 22.20 22.45 22.70 Calculated output unbalance 3.5% 3.5% 3.5%
A ferroresonant type of constant voltage transformer has been illustrated for use in single-phase and threephase operation, but it should be clear that because of the symmetry of transformer any phase can be used as desired, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. It is also anticipated that other embodiments and equivalents are within the scope of the invention including the use of inherent current limiting transformer features by the elimination of the resonant circuit.
Accordingly, the present invention is not to be construed as limited to the particular forms disclosed herein since these are to be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive.
lclaim:
1. A constant voltage transformer comprising in combination:
a. a plurality of input windings;
b. first magnetic core linked to each said input winding and adapted to absorb flux during an input voltage rise in said input windings;
0. second magnetic core linked to each said input winding;
. a resonance circuit having a plurality of resonant windings coupled to at least one capacitance, each said resonant winding being linked to said second magnetic core and said resonance circuit being adapted to produce a resonance for producing secondary flux in said second magnetic core from capacitance current in said resonant circuit, said current being in time phase with the primary flux of the second core to produce an increase in the flux of said second core means whereby said second core will be saturated while said first core is still unsaturated; and a plurality of output windings linked to said second magnetic core for producing a substantially constant voltage output.
2. The transformer in accordance with claim 1 in which said input winding, said output winding and said resonance circuit are three-phase circuits whereby said transformer operates in a three-phase mode.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2 in which said first core means is single core having three input windings thereon, and said second core means is a single core having three input windings thereon, three resonant windings thereon, and three output windings thereon for three-phase operation.
4. A multiple-phase constant voltage ferroresonant transformer having a symmetry structure comprising in combination:
a. a plurality of input windings;
b. a first core linked to each said input winding;
0. a second core linked to each said input winding;
d. resonant circuit means having a plurality of resonant windings each coupled only with said second core; and
e. a plurality of output windings coupled only to said second core means for producing an output whereby the saturatior fluxes on sai seco d c re occur a substantially t e same time or a p ura lty phase constant voltage ferroresonant transformer. 5. The apparatus according to claim 4 having three input windings and three output windings for operation in a three-phase mode.

Claims (5)

1. A constant voltage transformer comprising in combination: a. a plurality of input windings; b. first magnetic core linked to each said input winding and adapted to absorb flux during an input voltage rise in said input windings; c. second magnetic core linked to each said input winding; d. a resonance circuit having a plurality of resonant windings coupled to at least one capacitance, each said resonant winding being linked to said second magnetic core and said resonance circuit being adapted to produce a resonance for producing secondary flux in said second magnetic core from capacitance current in said resonant circuit, said current being in time phase with the primary flux of the second core to produce an increase in the flux of said second core means whereby said second core will be saturated while said first core is still unsaturated; and a plurality of output windings linked to said second magnetic core for producing a substantially constant voltage output.
2. The transformer in accordance with claim 1 in which said input winding, said output winding and said resonance circuit are three-phase circuits whereby said transformer operates in a three-phase mode.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2 in which said first core means is single core having three input windings thereon, and said second core means is a single core having three input windings thereon, three resonant windings thereon, and three output windings thereon for three-phase operation.
4. A multiple-phase constant voltage ferroresonant transformer having a symmetry structure comprising in combination: a. a plurality of input windings; b. a first core linked to each said input winding; c. a second core linked to each said input winding; d. resonant circuit means having a plurality of resonant windings each coupled only with said second core; and e. a plurality of output windings coupled only to said second core means for producing an output whereby the saturation fluxes on said second core occur at substantially the same time for a plurality phase constant voltage ferroresonant transformer.
5. The apparatus according to claim 4 having three input windings and three output windings for operation in a three-phase mode.
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US7889517B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2011-02-15 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power system with power converters having an adaptive controller
US7906941B2 (en) 2007-06-19 2011-03-15 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. System and method for estimating input power for a power processing circuit
US8125205B2 (en) 2006-08-31 2012-02-28 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power converter employing regulators with a coupled inductor
US8502520B2 (en) 2007-03-14 2013-08-06 Flextronics International Usa, Inc Isolated power converter
US8514593B2 (en) 2009-06-17 2013-08-20 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Power converter employing a variable switching frequency and a magnetic device with a non-uniform gap
US8520414B2 (en) 2009-01-19 2013-08-27 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Controller for a power converter
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US8638578B2 (en) 2009-08-14 2014-01-28 Power System Technologies, Ltd. Power converter including a charge pump employable in a power adapter
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US20060187684A1 (en) * 2005-02-08 2006-08-24 Sriram Chandrasekaran Power converter employing integrated magnetics with a current multiplier rectifier and method of operating the same
US7385375B2 (en) 2005-02-23 2008-06-10 Coldwatt, Inc. Control circuit for a depletion mode switch and method of operating the same
US7876191B2 (en) 2005-02-23 2011-01-25 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power converter employing a tapped inductor and integrated magnetics and method of operating the same
US7298118B2 (en) 2005-02-23 2007-11-20 Coldwatt, Inc. Power converter employing a tapped inductor and integrated magnetics and method of operating the same
US20070114979A1 (en) * 2005-02-23 2007-05-24 Sriram Chandrasekaran Power converter employing a tapped inductor and integrated magnetics and method of operating the same
US20060198173A1 (en) * 2005-02-23 2006-09-07 Rozman Allen F Control circuit for a depletion mode switch and method of operating the same
US20070185754A1 (en) * 2006-02-07 2007-08-09 Sap Ag Task responsibility system
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US7889517B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2011-02-15 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power system with power converters having an adaptive controller
US7675758B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2010-03-09 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power converter with an adaptive controller and method of operating the same
US7667986B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2010-02-23 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power system with power converters having an adaptive controller
US8477514B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2013-07-02 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power system with power converters having an adaptive controller
US7675759B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2010-03-09 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power system with power converters having an adaptive controller
US9197132B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2015-11-24 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. Power converter with an adaptive controller and method of operating the same
US8502520B2 (en) 2007-03-14 2013-08-06 Flextronics International Usa, Inc Isolated power converter
US7906941B2 (en) 2007-06-19 2011-03-15 Flextronics International Usa, Inc. System and method for estimating input power for a power processing circuit
US9088216B2 (en) 2009-01-19 2015-07-21 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Controller for a synchronous rectifier switch
US8520414B2 (en) 2009-01-19 2013-08-27 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Controller for a power converter
US9019061B2 (en) 2009-03-31 2015-04-28 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Magnetic device formed with U-shaped core pieces and power converter employing the same
US8514593B2 (en) 2009-06-17 2013-08-20 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Power converter employing a variable switching frequency and a magnetic device with a non-uniform gap
US8643222B2 (en) 2009-06-17 2014-02-04 Power Systems Technologies Ltd Power adapter employing a power reducer
US9077248B2 (en) 2009-06-17 2015-07-07 Power Systems Technologies Ltd Start-up circuit for a power adapter
US8638578B2 (en) 2009-08-14 2014-01-28 Power System Technologies, Ltd. Power converter including a charge pump employable in a power adapter
US8976549B2 (en) 2009-12-03 2015-03-10 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Startup circuit including first and second Schmitt triggers and power converter employing the same
US8520420B2 (en) 2009-12-18 2013-08-27 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Controller for modifying dead time between switches in a power converter
US9246391B2 (en) 2010-01-22 2016-01-26 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Controller for providing a corrected signal to a sensed peak current through a circuit element of a power converter
US8787043B2 (en) 2010-01-22 2014-07-22 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Controller for a power converter and method of operating the same
US8767418B2 (en) 2010-03-17 2014-07-01 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Control system for a power converter and method of operating the same
US8792257B2 (en) 2011-03-25 2014-07-29 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Power converter with reduced power dissipation
US8792256B2 (en) 2012-01-27 2014-07-29 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Controller for a switch and method of operating the same
US9190898B2 (en) 2012-07-06 2015-11-17 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd Controller for a power converter and method of operating the same
US9106130B2 (en) 2012-07-16 2015-08-11 Power Systems Technologies, Inc. Magnetic device and power converter employing the same
US9099232B2 (en) 2012-07-16 2015-08-04 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Magnetic device and power converter employing the same
US9214264B2 (en) 2012-07-16 2015-12-15 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Magnetic device and power converter employing the same
US9379629B2 (en) 2012-07-16 2016-06-28 Power Systems Technologies, Ltd. Magnetic device and power converter employing the same
US9240712B2 (en) 2012-12-13 2016-01-19 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Controller including a common current-sense device for power switches of a power converter
US9300206B2 (en) 2013-11-15 2016-03-29 Power Systems Technologies Ltd. Method for estimating power of a power converter
RU2612279C2 (en) * 2014-12-30 2017-03-06 Акционерное общество "Ордена Трудового Красного Знамени Всероссийский научно-исследовательский институт радиоаппаратуры" (АО "ВНИИРА") Alternating current stabiliser

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