1 - Electric Circuit Presentation (Chapter 2)
1 - Electric Circuit Presentation (Chapter 2)
1 - Electric Circuit Presentation (Chapter 2)
2
Overview
1.2
0.8
0 Volts baseline
0.4
0.0
0 90 180 270 360 450 540 630
-0.4
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-1.2
Direct Current
100% Duty Cycle
0 Volts baseline
Direct Current with Ripple
100% Duty Cycle
By Spinningspark
0 Volts baseline
Pulsed DC: Full-Wave Rectified; 2x frequency
Full-Wave Rectified
1.2
0.8
0.4
-0.4
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-1.2
Pulsed Direct Current: Square Wave
0 Volts baseline
Effect of Voltage on Wave Shape
Smith-Root LR-24 Backpack
Oscilloscope Tracings (Graphs)
Duty Cycle Video
0 Volts baseline
Control Box Components
Battery – Direct Current
Switch Fuse
Resistor Ground
Control Box Components
Diode – One-way valve
Bridge Rectifier
Alternating Current + Diode = Half-Wave Rectified DC
1.2 1.2
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Alternating Current + SCR = Controlled-Rectified
DC
AC Sine Wave 50 % of Range
1.2 1.3
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0 90 180 270 360 450 540 630
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Changing Voltage of a PDC Waveform
• The gate in the silicon-controlled rectifier allows current to flow when a set
voltage is present. An SCR is a way of changing voltage on a pulsed DC
waveform. The issue with this method of changing voltage is that pulse width
and duty cycle vary as well. In other words, the control for voltage and the
control for duty cycle are not independent. For a video example, go to:
1.2 1.2
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Example of Components Comprising an
Electrofishing System
(battery or generator powered)
DC AC AC
DC-AC Transformer
Battery
Inverter (change voltage)
Square-wave
PDC output AC
AC
Generator
Pulser (high powered
switching transistor)
AC output
PDC
DC
Smoothing AC
with AC-DC
reservoir Converter
(rectification)
capacitors
DC (smooth or Rectified PDC output
ripple) output
Power Source
• The power source to run a control box is
either a battery or a generator
• Oscilloscopes
– Read out peak values for AC, DC, PDC as well as
waveform shape
How to Make Measurements
• See Making Voltage and Current
Measurements.pdf and view a video on
the field use of a current clamp:
Vp – 52 Volts
Calibration Check Graph
(for Peak Voltage)
• It is a good idea to test a series of voltage settings from
low to high at each water conductivity. The results can
be compared to outputs expected using “Boat Power” or
“Backpack Power” Excel tools to potentially explain
output deviations from expected.
Relationship between voltage setting and actual output important for voltage goal setting.
400
300
200
100
0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
T = 16.40 ms
Frequency = 1/T = 1/16.40ms = 60.97 Hz
Calibration Check Graph
(for Frequency)
• Note that the final tab on the right contains data collected in
regards to voltage gradient probes and metering. This topic
will be taken up later with discussions on electric fields.
Calibration Check Examples
• Also check out these additional calibration examples:
Backpack Calibration
Next Step