mriechert
Electrical
- Sep 11, 2001
- 10
Hello all;
I have just had a discussion with a collegue about rectfiying 115V AC @ 400Hz. The question came up if we can use a power supply rated for 115V AC @60Hz to rectify 115V AC @ 400Hz.
At first I thought you could since after the bridge diode rectifer the voltage would be DC and so therefore any components after that wouldn't "feel" the effect of the Alternating current whether it was 60Hz or 400Hz. and the voltage would be the same since RMS of 115VAC @ 60HZ is the same as RMS 115VAC @ 400HZ... so this would seem frequency independant.
However from experiance the rectifier operates at a higher temperature when operated at 400Hz rather than its designed 60Hz. Could this be because the diodes are required to cycle from fwd bias to reverse bias and higher rate???
cheers
mriechert
I have just had a discussion with a collegue about rectfiying 115V AC @ 400Hz. The question came up if we can use a power supply rated for 115V AC @60Hz to rectify 115V AC @ 400Hz.
At first I thought you could since after the bridge diode rectifer the voltage would be DC and so therefore any components after that wouldn't "feel" the effect of the Alternating current whether it was 60Hz or 400Hz. and the voltage would be the same since RMS of 115VAC @ 60HZ is the same as RMS 115VAC @ 400HZ... so this would seem frequency independant.
However from experiance the rectifier operates at a higher temperature when operated at 400Hz rather than its designed 60Hz. Could this be because the diodes are required to cycle from fwd bias to reverse bias and higher rate???
cheers
mriechert