I see two points:
- It's unclear, how the circuit ground is referenced to the mains voltage. The differential amplifier must be expected to show limited common mode rejection, particularly for higher frequency interferences.
- If you operate the inverter grid connected (the purpose of the zero crossing detector isn't excatly clear, but the description sounds
like intending inverter mains synchronisation), the mains waveform may actually affected by by non-sinoidal currents, depending on the
mains impedance. Utility companies usally require a high power factor for grid connected inverters.
But a grid connected sine PWM would require the sine generator synchronized to the grid, not just switching a polarity.And when the square wave is 1 the high side MOSFET is switched and when the square wave is 0 the low side MOSFET is turned on.
2. You may be wondering why I am thinking of using both transformer and voltage divider - the transformer will consume less power than the divider or am I wrong again?
3. If monitoring one phase is not enough - why monitoring 2 instead of all 3 phases ? Could you please explain that to me in a more detailed way.
The third voltage is either the sum or difference (depending on your polarity definition). Of course this applies to the sine waveform, not the sign signal. so you still need three zero crossing detectors, if you want to sense the three voltage signs. If you only want the three intervoltage voltage signs (with isolation), optocouplers are actually the most simple solution.why monitoring 2 instead of all 3 phases
FvM said:As I already said, zero crossing detection allone is probably not sufficient to operate a grid connected inverter.
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