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DC Power
Input Considerations
Conducted
Susceptibility and Spike Effects
Conducted
susceptibility is a test method that applies an AC modulation
superimposed on the DC/DC Converter's power input leads. It
corresponds to method CS01 and CS02 of MIL-STD-461C and CS101
of MIL-STD-461D. CS01 extends from 30 Hz to 50 kHz, so is called
audio frequency susceptibility.
All testing
for conducted susceptibility is normally done at nominal full
load conditions. For the CS01 test, an audio signal of 2.8 volts
RMS (8.2 volts peak to peak) is superimposed on the input 28
VDC. From 1.5 kHz to 50 kHz, the amplitude decreases linearly.
In addition, the power of the susceptibility source is limited
to 50 watts.
For the
120 VDC series of converters, the conducted susceptibility level
is 5 volts RMS superimposed on a nominal 120 VDC level, in accordance
with SSP30237. For the 270 VDC converters, the test voltage
is 10 V RMS. The 8 to 40 VDC units are tested with a conducted
susceptibility voltage of 1 volt RMS superimposed on a 14 VDC
level.
For 5000
series parts, the CS01 voltage is 1Vp-p and the parts are tested
at 28 VDC For 7000 series parts, the CS01 voltage is 1Vp-p and
the parts are tested at 50 VDC For 8000 series parts, the CS01
voltage is 2Vp-p and the parts are tested at 70 VDC For 9000
series parts, the CS01 voltage is 2V p-p and the parts are
tested at 100 VDC.
Applying the
audio susceptibility signal causes the DC/DC Converter's output
to be modulated at the audio frequency. Thus, the output of the
DC/DC Converter has the normal high frequency ripple with the audio
superimposed. Standard MDI pass/fail criteria for CS01 testing is
that the envelope of the peak to peak output modulation not exceed
the specified peak to peak ripple specification. Therefore, the
maximum allowable output deviation with a conducted susceptibility
input is twice the allowable peak to peak ripple.
The MDI full
featured DC/DC Converters have excellent rejection of conducted
susceptibility due to their current mode inner loop. The basic converter
has a loop gain of greater than 50 dB. The typical EMI resonance
is in the 5 kHz to 10 kHz area, where a peaking of approximately
10-12 dB can occur. This peaking amplifies the conducted susceptibility,
so it subtracts from the basic audio rejection of the converter.
Beyond this point, the filter adds attenuation.
In MDI's standard
triple output converters, one output (usually 5 VDC) is the main
regulated output. Only the main regulated output will exhibit conducted
susceptibility effects. The other two outputs are linear regulated.
In this event, there is virtually no discernible effect on the linear
regulated outputs arising from the conducted susceptibility. The
reason for this is the additional voltage rejection of the linear
regulator itself.
CS02 testing
extends the conducted susceptibility range from 50 kHz up through
the low UHF region. The injection methods of CS02 are different
from CS01 injection because of the frequency range. The coupling
method allows the use of standard 50 ohm impedance RF generators
and amplifiers.
Due to highly
effective input filter response in this frequency range, it is unusual
to detect any change in DC/DC Converter performance when this test
is performed. Because the power return leg is at RF ground, the
CS02 test should be performed on the positive power lead only.
Spikes impressed
on the power input leads of the full featured DC/DC Converters are
principally attenuated by the input EMI filter. The filter losslessly
transforms the shape of narrow spike waveforms into a lower amplitude
damped sinusoid at the input EMI filter's resonant frequency. A
+/- 5% output voltage deviation is allowed for the converters full
featured DC/DC Converters when the CS06 or equivalent spike waveform
is applied.
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