OCPumpGuy
Mechanical
- Jul 3, 2009
- 6
I am a mechanical engineer trying to understand how a solenoid works. I always thought the EE's had it easy. I mean a resistor is pretty linear in comparison to a hydraulic orifice. Apparently I have found an electrical non-linearity I don't understand.
I have a 12V DC solenoid. The resistance measures 6 ohms and the inductance is unknown (I'd guess around 30-40 mH). It is a wet pin solenoid for use in hydraulic valves. I wanted to do a "step response" test so that I could estimate the inductance based on the time constant from the step input (tau=L/R). My end goal is to include this solenoid in a dynamic model for an electro-hydraulic actuator.
To perform my test, I put a momentary switch in series with the solenoid (switching the high side). In order to dissipate the energy when the switch was opened, I put an IN5408 diode in parallel with the coil. I then activated and deactivated the switch about once every second for 10 seconds while recording the voltage across the coil and the current through the coil. The current was measured with a vektrex hall effect current sensor.
When I plotted the voltage and current, I was shocked. The response time on the rising side was significantly longer than the response time on the falling side (roughly a factor of 2). I'm not a EE, but I'm pretty good with dynamic systems. I'm having a hard time identifying the nonlinearity that is causing the rise time to be slower than the fall time.
I can post the actual test data if it would help (on Monday when I'm back in the office), but I've got to believe that an EE worth his salt knows exactly why this happens.
I have a 12V DC solenoid. The resistance measures 6 ohms and the inductance is unknown (I'd guess around 30-40 mH). It is a wet pin solenoid for use in hydraulic valves. I wanted to do a "step response" test so that I could estimate the inductance based on the time constant from the step input (tau=L/R). My end goal is to include this solenoid in a dynamic model for an electro-hydraulic actuator.
To perform my test, I put a momentary switch in series with the solenoid (switching the high side). In order to dissipate the energy when the switch was opened, I put an IN5408 diode in parallel with the coil. I then activated and deactivated the switch about once every second for 10 seconds while recording the voltage across the coil and the current through the coil. The current was measured with a vektrex hall effect current sensor.
When I plotted the voltage and current, I was shocked. The response time on the rising side was significantly longer than the response time on the falling side (roughly a factor of 2). I'm not a EE, but I'm pretty good with dynamic systems. I'm having a hard time identifying the nonlinearity that is causing the rise time to be slower than the fall time.
I can post the actual test data if it would help (on Monday when I'm back in the office), but I've got to believe that an EE worth his salt knows exactly why this happens.