righteous
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The problem with your proposed circuit, is that even with the Mosfet compeltely disabled, there will be still a current flow from Vm thru the motor, and then thru R and D into ground.
Hi,
I assume your question is regarding
* slow decay mode --> to keep current high, high torque, good RPM stability
* fast decay mode --> to reduce current. After a short circuit condition. for torque control.
Klaus
No. You will burn both FETs, most likely.But then couldn't you just add a high side FET and then turn that one off?
A motor will always have BEMF. You are misunderstanding something.Well, I'm actually trying to figure out by experimentation how the motor will operate without the BEMF, so I want to remove the BEMF from the equation so to say.
No. You will burn both FETs, most likely.
A motor will always have BEMF. You are misunderstanding something.
When you turn OFF both FETs, your current "Im" can not flow nowhere.Why is that?
So I was right you are misunderstanding something.It is this BEMF I want to take an alternative path.
When you turn OFF both FETs, your current "Im" can not flow nowhere.
So I was right you are misunderstanding something.
BEMF is a voltage, so it can not take an alternative path ! It will always be between the "+" and "-" terminals of the motor. I guess that you are trying to give an alternative path for the current..
I do not understand why you do not like the 1st circuit figure in post #1
No body diode will conduct in figure of post #4.But what about the body diodes? The will conduct?
Yes it can. Re-read post #2.so why can't it do the same in figure #2 in post #1?
Hi,
There are several misunderstandings.
See this picture:
magenta: MOSFET is LOW ohmic
green: MOSFET is high ohmic
View attachment 145911
* Current through L is always in the same direction
* body diode of MOSFET is never active
BackEMF of a motor is something different than BackEMF of an inductance.
No body diode will conduct in figure of post #4.
Yes it can. Re-read post #2.
1st difference: motor <--> inductance. It´s not the same. The generated voltage is opposite.Yes, but how is that different from this?
1st difference: motor <--> inductance. It´s not the same. The generated voltage is opposite.
2st differnce - or better say "problem". The motor never is OFF. Either the current runs through the MOSFET or it runs through the d-R combination.
If you make R high impedance it won´t kill voltage peaks. If you make it low impedance the motor won´t stop.
Can you find a good compromise value?
3rd - where is the benefit?
At a real motor you will see a negative high voltage peak caused by stray inductance, then it becomes a positive voltage that is proportional to RPM.
You need to avoid/suppress the negative voltage peak, otherwise it may kill the semiconductors.
Yes you could.Yes, and then Herrn. Schmitt said "there will be still a current flow from Vm thru the motor, and then thru R and D into ground." and then I said "increase voltage potential above V(m) after the diode with a cap or something?"
Is that the way to go?
I should have written: "motor_backEMF is not the same as inductor_backEMF"And what do you mean by "motor <--> inductance. It´s not the same."? A motor has a coil, a coil has inductance? The only slight difference I can see is that from time to time some magnets are zipping past the coil while it is on.
Ok. "Something" is a bit vague to discuss about.I proposed to put something after the diode to keep V(r) above V(m) e.g. a cap or a battery, then the diode is reverse biased and current can't run through the D-R combo, so the motor will actually be off during (inductive) BEMF?
Stray inductance is everywhere. Every piece of wire causes stray inductance...and for sure the wiring inside a motor, too.Where does stray inductance occur and come from in a motor?
But why? The fly-back diode is there to protect the switch transistor and also to recirculate the energy stored in armature inductance instead of dissipating it, particularly useful in PWM operation.But I'm referring to the BEMF of the collapsing magnetic field of the coil in the motor that occurs when you turn the FET off, as you normally do in e.g. switching power supplies. It is this BEMF I want to take an alternative path.
Yes you could.
By the way, in post #1, what do you mean by "aiding coasting" ?
The usual technical term is armature winding e.m.f. or just e.m.f.
But why? The fly-back diode is there to protect the switch transistor and also to recirculate the energy stored in armature inductance instead of dissipating it, particularly useful in PWM operation.
Ok. "Something" is a bit vague to discuss about.
" to keep V(r) above V(m)" ..... others use a zener to get this
The original fly-back diode gives high efficiency in single quadrant PWM control. Only a synchronous switch gives slightly better efficiency by removing the diode voltage drop. The imagined "alternative" path solutions are no way better.
Texas Instruments said:When Q3 is now switched OFF, and Q4 is switched ON, the inductor now looks for an alternate path to keep its current flowing in the same direction. And what is that path? It turns out that the new path of least resistance is to flow in the reverse direction through Q1, back through the DC power supply AS NEGATIVE CURRENT, and then return in the reverse direction through Q4. If your DC bus has positive voltage and negative current, then that means that it has negative power during that instance. This negative bus current will charge up the bus capacitor to a higher voltage until the inductive flyback is quenched, or the next switching state is applied
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