Ee 3
Ee 3
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POWER SUPPLY
BY
NWAMBE CHUKWUNONSO .C.
REG. NO: EE/2005/124
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL/ELECTRONIC
ENGINERRING.
CARITAS UNIVERSITY
AMORJI NIKE
EMENE
ENUGU STATE.
PRESENTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE
REQUIREMENT FOR THE AWARD OF BACHELOR
OF ENGINEERING (B.ENG) DEGREE IN
ELECTICAL ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING.
AUGUST. 2010.
DEDICATION
This work is dedicated to God almighty, my beloved parents,
chief & Dr. mrs. S.N Nwambe. Without their help I wouldnt realized
this work.
CERTIFICATION
This Project construction of UNTERRUPTIBLE POWER
SUPPLY (UPS) was completed under the supervision and found
acceptable in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the award of
bachelor of Engineering (B.Eng) Degree in Electrical and Electronic
Engineering Caritas University Enugu.
Certified by:
.
Engr M. O Eze
(Project supervisor)
Date
Approved by:
.
Prof G.C Ochiagha.
(H.O.D)
Date
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I wish to thank Almighty God who in his infinite mercy, granted
me the strength to do and complete this work, because it wasnt easy.
Secondly, to my lecturers, My project supervisor Engr. Eze, My
H.O.D Prof. G.C Ochiagha, Engr. P.N Mba, Engr. Ejimofor, Engr.
Emeasoba, Engr Ochi, Engr. Nnaji, Engr. Ozoani, Engr. Mrs.
Otegburu and many others.
Once again am particularly grateful to my parents for their
encouragement till this stage of my life, many thanks also goes to
Engr. Boniface for teaching me circuitry connections.
However, am indebted to all the staff and teachers of faculty of
Engineering, Caritas University. My brothers Ejike, Chidi, my sisters
Chioma and Onyi should also be thanked for their supports and
encouragement.
Finally I wish to thank all my departmental staff for their help.
ABSTRACT
Uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) are used to provide power
when regular utility power is unavailable. Although they are
commonly used for providing power in remote locations or
emergencies, this is not because they are the same as auxiliary
power units, emergency power units or standby generators.
Unlike the aforementioned power sources, UPS provides an
immediate and continuous supply of power to a device, hence
protecting it from power interruption and allowing time for auxiliary or
emergency powers, to kick in equipment to be safely shut down or
utility power restored.
The major aim of this was to design a system which will be able to
convert battery voltage(12v) to 220v, which is equivalent to wall outlet
and secondly able to charge the battery.
The chapter one of this work, gives the over-view of UPS, its
importance, uses, and application and some of its special features
like its ability to correct frequency instability and many more.
Secondly, this work dealt with all components used in the
construction of the device, there working condition and uses. Some
basic abstract phenomenon were also treated like wave forms and
electronic switching.
The chapter three, basically dealt on all electrical measuring
instrument used in and on the device, how they are used, why and
where.
The fourth chapter explains how the components where assembled
into section and the sectional connection used to form the device.
The last chapter is a simple conclusion with honest recommendation.
TABLE OF CONTENT
CERTIFICATION -
DEDICATION
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
iii
ABSTRACT
iv
TABLE OF CONTENT -
CHAPTER ONE
1.1
INTRODUCTION
1.1
1.2
1.3
CHAPTER TWO
2.1
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1
WHAT IS A UPS? -
2.2
WAVEFORMS
2.2.1 SQUAREWAVE
10
10
2.3
RESISTORS
11
2.4
CAPACITORS
12
13
1.4.1 CAPACITANCE
14
14
DIODE
16
18
18
2.5
19
19
21
22
23
2.5.6
24
26
26
2.6.2 MOSFETS -
28
29
29
30
30
31
32
32
2.6
2.7
FILTERS -
TRANSISTORS
OPTO-COUPLER-
33
33
34
36
METHODOLOGY
3.1
ELECTRONIC WORKBENCH
37
3.2
GALVANOMETER
37
3.3
OSCILLOSCOPE -
38
3.4
VOLTMETER
39
3.5
AMPMETER
41
3.6
WATTMETER
43
3.7
MULTIMETERS -
44
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0
46
4.1
47
4.2
47
50
51
52
53
54
4.3
COMPONENT JUSTIFICATION
4.3.1 MOSFETS -
55
55
55
4.3.3 OPTO-COUPLER -
56
4.3.4 RESISTORS -
56
56
57
4.5
60
CHAPTER FIVE
5.0 CONCLUSION
5.1 RECOMMENDATION
REFERENCES
62
62
63
LIST OF FIGURES
Fig 1.
Fig 2.
A capacitor
12
Fig 3.
Capacitors -
15
Fig 4.
17
Fig 5.
A Led-
20
Fig 6.
Half-wave rectifier
21
Fig 7.
22
Fig 8.
24
Fig 9.
A Simple filter
25
Fig 10.
Transistor as a Switch -
27
Fig 11.
A Transistor as a Switch
27
Fig 12.
A Mosfet
28
Fig 13
Opto-Couplers Input
32
Fig 14.
32
Fig 15.
A Digram of a Voltmeter
41
Fig 16.
42
Fig 17
43
Fig 18
Oscillator Circuit -
49
Fig 19
Pre-Driver Section
51
Fig 20
53
Fig 21
54
CHAPTER ONE
1.10 INTRODUCTION
As blackouts roll through power-starved communities, the
threat to you and your computer is not the lack of electricity,
but the change in power. When the lights are off and you are
about to start any industrial or computer-based projects, all
your efforts will be wasted. Even when your system acts as a
server, a sudden shutdown could disrupt the processing of
many others. You can make your work immune to the
intransigence of rolling blackouts and protect against many
other types of unexpected power disturbances. Your secret
weapon
is
the
uninterruptible
power
supply
or
DC and AC Current
In the world today there are currently two forms of electrical
transmission, Direct Current (DC) and Alternating Current
(AC), each with its own advantages and disadvantages. DC
power is simply the application of a steady constant voltage
across a circuit resulting in a constant current. A battery is
the most common source of DC transmission as current flows
from one end of a circuit to the other. Most digital circuitry
today is run off of DC power as it carries the ability to
provide either a constant high or constant low voltage,
enabling digital logic to process code executions. Historically,
electricity was first commecially transmitted by Thomas
Edison, and was a DC power line. However, this electricity
was low voltage, due to the inability to step up DC voltage at
the time, and thus it was not capable of transmitting power
over long distances.
V =IR
P=IV = I2R
from
the
electrical
current
squared
and
the
decreases
transmission
exponentially;
reduces
power
therefore
loss.
For
high
this
voltage
reasoning
many
high
voltage
DC
transmission
systems
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
To
highlight
the
basic
components
used
in
the
CHAPTER TWO
2.12 WAVEFORMS
basic
waveforms
produced
by
the
solid
state
2.13 RESISTORS
2.14 CAPACITORS
is
to
store
electrical
energy
by
means
of
One plate is joined to the positive end of the supply and the
other to the negative end or can be said to be earthed. It has
been experimentally found that in the presence of an
earthed plate B, plate A is capable of withholding more
charge when B is not there. Therefore when such a capacitor
2.14.1 CAPACITANCE
C= Q/V
Where C is the capacitance of the capacitor
Q is the charge
V is the potential difference across the plates
K.
Most
common
electrolytic
capacitors
use
K.
Most
common
electrolytic
capacitors
use
thin,
these
capacitors
are
more
prone
to
;electrolytic
capacitors,
monolithic,ceramic,MKT
2.14.3. PLASTIC
FILM,
CAPACITORS
CERAMIC
AND
MONOLITHIC
2.15 DIODE
It is two terminal device consisting of a P-N junction formed
either in Ge or Si crystal. Its circuit symbol is shown below.
Anode
cathode
2.15.3
IDEAL DIODE
2.15.4
Fig 2.15.4
a led
rated for at least 4.2 times the rms ac input voltage. Halfwave rectification has some shortcomings. First, the output
is difficult to smoothen-out because the waveform is so
irregular. Second, the output voltage tends to drop when the
supply is connected to a load (this can be countered to some
extent by means of a good voltage regulator). Third, halfwave rectification puts a disproportionate strain on the
power transformer and the diodes. Half-wave rectification is
useful in supplies that so not have to deliver much current,
or that do not need to be well regulated. The main
advantage of using a half- wave circuit in these situations is
that it costs a little less than full wave or bridge circuits.
have a PIV rating of at least 4.2 times the rms ac input. The
In
Out
2.15.6 FILTERS
2.16 TRANSISTORS
an
electronic
device
such
as
common
bipolar
Because
advantages
of
the
mentioned
switching
above,
the
speed
use
of
and
other
electronic
2.16.2 MOSFETS
oxide-semiconductor
field-effect
transistor.
2.16 OPTO-COUPLER
The optical coupler is a venerable device that offers the
design engineer new freedoms in designing circuits and
system. Problems such as ground loop isolation, common
mode noise rejection, power supply transformations, and
many more problems can be solved or simplified with the
emitted
light.
The
input
to
the
coupler
is
Also,
the
detector
could
be
photovoltaic
cell,
doublers,
employing
fixed-48
and
polarity
frequency,
convert
applications
pulse-width-modulation
on-chip
regulator,
error
amplifier,
programmable
paralleled
for
single-ended
applications
in
which
the
CHAPTER THREE
3.10 METHODOLOGY
The approach adopted in the project work is a study of the material that
relates to the design of the UPS. The main aim relying mostly on articles and
scientific materials for the design of the inverter, and in most cases the
contemporary authors of these theories have tested and proven these designs
which are adopted today.
In my research the following or electrical measuring instruments were used
in order to achieve a calibrated process and a lasting design. Theses devices
are discussed briefly below, they include
electronic work bench software
Galvanometer
Oscilloscope
Volt meter
Amp meter
Watt meter
The Electronic Work bench is a simulation soft ware which runs on almost
any windows platform and be used to design and simulate a circuitry to see
if there are errors in the design layout. In this tool, a signal source can be
attached to the input and when switched ON, the output waveform can be
viewed on an oscilloscope plot on the screen of the computer. It is very
essential tool for designing and test-running circuitry before the main
construction process can start. It is also a known fact that when a workable
design has been accomplished, 70% of the job is said to be done.
3.12 GALVANOMETER
Early Scientists Experimenting on electricity and magnetism noticed that an
electric current produces a magnetic field. This discovery was probably an
accident, but it got the curiosity of scientist. When a magnetic compass is
placed near a wire carrying a direct electric current, the compass does not
point toward magnetic north, the needle is displaced. The extent of the error
depends on how close the compass is brought to the wire, and also on how
much current the wire is carrying. Scientific experimenters are like children.
They first observed, the scientist tried different arrangements to see how
much the compass needle could be displaced, and how small a current could
be detected. An attempt was made to obtain the greatest possible current-
3.13 OSCILLOSCOPE
This measures and records quantities that vary rapidly at rates of hundreds,
thousands, or millions of times per second. It creates a graph by throwing
a beam of electrons at a phosphor screen. A cathode-ray tube, similar to the
kind in a television seat, is employed. Oscilloscopes are useful for looking
at the shapes of signal waveforms, and also for measuring peak signal levels
(rather than just the effective levels). An oscilloscope can also be used to
approximately measure the frequency of a waveform.
The horizontal scale instantaneous shows time, and the vertical scale shows
instantaneous voltage. An oscilloscope can indirectly measure power or
current, by using a known value of resistance across the input terminals.
Technicians and engineers develop a sense of what a signal waveform
should look like, and them they can often tell, by observing the oscilloscope
display, whether or not the circuit under test is behaving the way it should.
This is a subjective kind of measurement, since it is qualitative as well as
quantitative.
If a wave shape looks wrong, it might indicate distortion in a circuit, or
possibly even cause a burned-out of component someplace. In this design I
used the oscilloscope on the electronic workbench in circuit stimulation.
3.14 VOLTMETER
Current is a flow of charge carriers. Voltage, or electromotive force (EMF),
or potential difference, is the pressure that makes a current possible. Given
a circuit whose resistance is constant, the current that will flow in the circuit
is directly proportional to the voltage placed across it. Early electrical
experimenters recognized that an ammeter could be used to measure voltage,
since an ammeter is a form of constantresistance circuit. If you connect an
ammeter directly across a source of voltage a battery, the meter needle will
deflect. In fact, a millimeter needle will probably be pinned if you do this
with it, and a micrometer might well be wreaked by the force of the needle
striking the pain at the top of the scale.
For this reason, you should never connect millimeter or micro ammeters
directly across voltage sources. An ammeter, perhaps with a range of 0-10 A,
might not deflect to full scale if it is placed across a battery, but it is still a
bad idea to do this, because it will rapidly drain the battery. Some batteries,
such as automotive lead-acid cells, explode under these conditions.
This is because all ammeters have low internal resistance. They are
designed that way deliberately. They are meant to be connected in series
with other parts of a circuit, not right across the power supply.
But if you place a large resistor in scribes with an ammeter, and then
connect the ammeter across a battery or other types of power supply, you no
longer have a short circuit. The ammeter will give an indication that is
directly proportional to the voltage of the supply. The smaller the full-scale
reading of the ammeter, the larger the resistance to get a meaningful
indication the meter. Using a micro ammeter and a large value of resistor in
series, a voltmeter can be devised that will draw only a little current from the
source. It is always good when a voltmeter has a high internal resistance.
The reason for this is that you dont want the meter to draw much current
from the power source. This current should go, as much as possible, towards
working whatever circuit is hooked up to the supply, and not into just getting
a reading of the voltage. Also, might not want, or need, to have the voltmeter
constantly connected in the circuit. You do not want the behavior of the
circuit to be affected the instant you connect the voltmeter to the supply. The
less current a voltmeter draws, the less it will affect the behavior of anything
that is working from the power supply.
3.16 WATTMETER
The measurement of electrical power requires that voltage and current both
be measured simultaneously. Remember that power is the product of the
voltage and current. That is, watts (P) equals volts (E) times amperes (I),
written as p= EL In fact, watts are sometimes called volt-amperes in a dc
circuit. You might think that you can just connect a voltmeter in parallel with
a circuit, thereby getting a reading of the voltage across it, and also hook up
an ammeter in series to get a reading of the current through the circuit, and
then multiply volts time's amperes to get watts consumed by the circuit
Infact, for practically all dc circuits, this is an excellent way to measure
power.
In this design, wattmeter of the above principle was used to determine the
power in watts that the inverter may be able to accommodate from the
diagram shown below
wattmeter
fig 3.5 diagram of a wattmeter arrangement
an electric iron might consume 1000 W, or a current of 1000/117 = 8.55 A.
and a large heating unit might gobble up 2000 W, requiring a current of
2000/ 117 = 17.1 A. this might below a fuse or breaker, since these devices
are often rated for only 15 A. you have probably had an experience where
you hooked up too many appliances to a single circuit, blowing the fuse or
breaker. The reason was that the appliances, combined, drew too much
current for the house wiring to safely handle, and the fuse or breaker,
detecting the excess current, opened the circuit.
3.17 MULTIMATES
CHAPTER FOUR
connected
across
the
battery
through
two
capacitors
is
F=1.30/RT*CT
Where F is the frequency in KHz
RT is the total resistance at pin-6
CT is the total capacitance at pin-7
Therefore to obtain a frequency of 50Hz
Given CI +C2 =CT
CT=0.1+0.1=0.2
Making RT subject formula
Therefore we have that RT=1.31/0.05*0.2
RT=1.31/0.01=131K
Therefore we have that RT must be varied at 131k to obtain
a frequency of 50Hz.
In my design I a fixed resistor of 100K and a variable resistor
of 20k.
Signal generated at the oscillator section of the IC reaches
the flip-flop section if the IC. This section converts the
incoming signal into signal with changing polarity. This signal
with changing polarity means that when the first signal is
positive the second would be negative and when the first
signal goes negative the second would be positive.
Therefore to achieve a frequency of 50Hz this process most
repeat 50 times per second at a regular interval i.e an
alternating signal with 50Hz frequency is generated inside
the flip-flop section of the IC.
This 50Hz frequency alternating signal has an output at pin11 and 14 of the IC. This alternating signal may also be
known as the MOS drive signal. This MOS drive signal at pin-
4v
6v
47uf
5K
6
1.2k
1k
22uf
1
104uf 2
3
4
5
100k
47
6
7
8
10k
10k
16
15
14
13
12
OSC
OSC11
10
9
4.7K
102uf
Fig4.12.1 oscillator
circuit4.7uf
The MOS drive signal from the pin-11 and 14 of the IC are
given to the base of the transistor T1 and T2. This results in
the MOS drive signal getting separated into two different
channels. Transistor T1 and T2 amplify the 50Hz MOS drive
current
in
the
bifilar
winding
of
inverter
3
IN4007
VCC
4N35
5
4
BD135
RELAY
circuit below
Pin 16 (OSC)
47K
100
10K
v
47kl
4
3
12 v
4.13.3 OPTO-COUPLER
The opto-coupler was adopted in the design mainly because
of its flexibility and most importantly its sensitivity to signal
from an input potential to the phototransistor.
4.13.4 RESISTORS
between 4V- 5V
Voltage at pin 11 and 14 should be equal
If these voltage are OK then reconnect the 3-pin
connector between the mains PCB and the MOSFET
Make sure that the voltage at pin- 11 and 14 of 1C2
(SG3524) should be equal. If there is difference in the
voltage on these pins, or if the MOS drive voltage is
missing, then there is some fault in the circuit.
If the MOS drive voltage is OK at pin 11 and 14 of 1C2
then check the MOSFET transistor gates for MOS drive
voltage.
If the MOS drive voltage is missing from all the MOSFET
gates, then check that the 3- pin connector joining the
output plate with MOS drive signal
If the MOS drive signal is missing from one of the
MOSFET gate then check the 22E resistance at the
gate.
transistor,
relay,
inverter
transformer,
Item Specification
RESISTORS
Capacitor 10 uf
Capacitor 0.1uf
Capacitor 47 uf
10000uf 35v
Quantity
20
2
6
2
2
Unit cost
N5
N20
N20
N20
N 80
Total cost
N 100
N 40
N 120
N 40
N 160
6
7
8
capacitor
MOSFET IRT 3205
Transformer step-up
220-12v step-down
2
1
1
N 200
N 3000
N 500
N 400
N 3000
N 500
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Transformer
Relay
Connecting Wires
A digital multi meter
A voltmeter
AC socket
Transistor BC557B
Battery IC
SG3524 IC
Opto coupler 4N35
Rocker on/off switch
Transport
Variable resistor
Vero board
N 300
N 250
N 900
N 150
N100
N 50
N 3000
N 600
N 250
N 50
N 300
N 20
N 200
N600
N250
N 900
N150
N 100
N50
N3000
N600
N250
N50
N300
N40
N200
N10,850.0
TOTAL COST
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
1
2
2
CHAPTER FIVE
5.10 CONCLUSION
It is obvious that UPS are indispensable power units in
virtually every scale of establishment. Its features such as
noiseless working condition, availability of storage elements,
numerous system compatibility etc, have not in any way
marred its acceptance. This device is really dominating in
computer establishment but in no due time will find use in
many other applications where it is still under consideration.
5.11 RECOMMENDATION
I strongly recommend a restructuring in our departments
project condition. I think conducting these project in group
will give a room for wider and in-depth research, sharing of
ideas
between
group
members
and
taking
and
non-
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Edward
S.
Klinfield,
H.
(1995).The Art
of Electronics.
Kelvin R. Sullivan(1992)