tunelabguy
Electrical
- Feb 13, 2007
- 2
I have been asked to design a custom motor protection circuit for use in the compressors of an airborne air conditioning system. For reasons that I do not completely understand, my client does not believe there is an off-the-shelf solution. The power is 3-phase, 400Hz. Apparently packaging is an issue, as well as the 400 Hz. The only functions that my client knows he wants are:
1. configurable thermal modeling for intelligent delayed overcurrent detection.
2. missing phase detection with a much shorter delay.
I plan on using a microcontroller to read current transformers on each of the three phases. Only the amplitudes will be significant - not the instantaneous AC current.
The goal is to provide something that is a little better than a simple breaker or slow-blo fuse.
My question is this: What other features are useful in a motor protection circuit that can be implemented without additional inputs? My client has hinted that maybe ground fault interruption might be nice, but that would require an additional transformer. Anything that requires tapping directly into the motor voltage raises a safety issue or requires expensive galvanic isolation. Even though the application is in an aircraft, the air conditioning system is not a critical safety issue. These are freight haulers, not passenger jets. The main thing is these compressor motors cost $10,000 each and shutting them down is a lot better than burning them up.
Robert Scott
Real-Time Specialties
Embedded Systems Consulting
1. configurable thermal modeling for intelligent delayed overcurrent detection.
2. missing phase detection with a much shorter delay.
I plan on using a microcontroller to read current transformers on each of the three phases. Only the amplitudes will be significant - not the instantaneous AC current.
The goal is to provide something that is a little better than a simple breaker or slow-blo fuse.
My question is this: What other features are useful in a motor protection circuit that can be implemented without additional inputs? My client has hinted that maybe ground fault interruption might be nice, but that would require an additional transformer. Anything that requires tapping directly into the motor voltage raises a safety issue or requires expensive galvanic isolation. Even though the application is in an aircraft, the air conditioning system is not a critical safety issue. These are freight haulers, not passenger jets. The main thing is these compressor motors cost $10,000 each and shutting them down is a lot better than burning them up.
Robert Scott
Real-Time Specialties
Embedded Systems Consulting