smnellore
Electrical
- Sep 4, 2008
- 10
We have two battery chargers connected in parallel feeding to a common battery bank. Please refer to battery charger SLD attached.Scenario-1 is presently using in our company.But with the present scheme loads are not sharing equally one charger is always taking full load with the other charger output current is zero. The different operating philosophys are explained with pro and cons. Kindly give your valuble feedbacks on these scenarios and which is the best.
SCENARIO-1:
Current operation philosophy is :
· To keep the two isolators A & B Closed
· To keep the load isolators C & D Closed
· To keep the bus coupling isolator E Open.
With the above scenario :
· The chargers are operating in parallel to the battery.
· But the loads are not shared (as there is no communication between the two). Thus one which has a slightly higher rectifier output voltage, reverse bias the output diode on the other charger and takes over the entire load.
· The battery current limit protection would not be active (as both chargers acting in parallel will double this limit).
SCENARIO-2:
Same connection (Isolator positions) as per current operation philosophy mentioned above.
· But it is designed with the objective that ONLY ONE CHARGER WILL BE TAKING THE FULL LOAD, while the other will just remain a HOT STANDBY. (i.e Sharing of load is not envisaged) .
· So in effect one charger will feed the battery and the protection will be taken care by the same.
SCENARIO-3:
Another possible alternate operation scenario :
· To keep either of two isolators A OR B open (So battery charged by one charger)
· To keep the load isolators C & D Closed
· To keep the bus coupling isolator E Closed.
With the above scenario :
· The battery is charged by one charger.
· Loads are shared by both chargers (though may not be in equal proportion).
· The battery current limit protection would be active (as single charger would be charging it).
Disadvantage :
· The short-circuit protection for any downstream (at the load side) fault could impact both chargers
SCENARIO-1:
Current operation philosophy is :
· To keep the two isolators A & B Closed
· To keep the load isolators C & D Closed
· To keep the bus coupling isolator E Open.
With the above scenario :
· The chargers are operating in parallel to the battery.
· But the loads are not shared (as there is no communication between the two). Thus one which has a slightly higher rectifier output voltage, reverse bias the output diode on the other charger and takes over the entire load.
· The battery current limit protection would not be active (as both chargers acting in parallel will double this limit).
SCENARIO-2:
Same connection (Isolator positions) as per current operation philosophy mentioned above.
· But it is designed with the objective that ONLY ONE CHARGER WILL BE TAKING THE FULL LOAD, while the other will just remain a HOT STANDBY. (i.e Sharing of load is not envisaged) .
· So in effect one charger will feed the battery and the protection will be taken care by the same.
SCENARIO-3:
Another possible alternate operation scenario :
· To keep either of two isolators A OR B open (So battery charged by one charger)
· To keep the load isolators C & D Closed
· To keep the bus coupling isolator E Closed.
With the above scenario :
· The battery is charged by one charger.
· Loads are shared by both chargers (though may not be in equal proportion).
· The battery current limit protection would be active (as single charger would be charging it).
Disadvantage :
· The short-circuit protection for any downstream (at the load side) fault could impact both chargers