PaulKraemer
Electrical
- Jan 13, 2012
- 145
Hi,
I have an application in which I will be using a solid-state relay with a closed-loop temperature controller to regulate the power to a resistance heater. The voltage will be 208 VAC single phase and the heater resistance will be 7.2 ohms, so the expected current is 28.9 amps when the heater is powered. The temperature controller implements a PID loop that determines the appropriate power level (between 0-100%) to be applied to the heater based on the difference between setpoint and the measured temperature. The output to the heater (through the solid-state relay) is time-proportioned, with a default time base of one second. With this being the case, the SSR repeatedly turns ON and then OFF every second, with the ON time (fraction of a second) determined by the calculated power level.
I have used this control method many times over the years. I have always used individual wires (of the appropriate ampacity) for the heater power circuit. I have never used shielded cable. While I have avoided running these wires with circuits that I consider very sensitive, I have often run them in the same conduit as encoder cables, although my encoder cables are always shielded. In these conduits, I have also included wires used to switch solenoid valves and to bring signals from prox switches into PLC inputs. I have never run into problems that seemed to be noise related.
I am working on a new project in which I will be using a VFD. From what I've read, VFD's are known to create noise and it is generally recommended that one uses a high-quality shielded VFD rated cable so as to avoid noise related issues. This made me wonder how a heater control circuit like I've described above would compare to the power cable that connects a VFD to a motor in terms of how much noise it is likely to emit.
On my current project, I am just wondering if I should take more precaution in keeping my heater power wires separated from other circuits than I have in the past.
Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Paul
I have an application in which I will be using a solid-state relay with a closed-loop temperature controller to regulate the power to a resistance heater. The voltage will be 208 VAC single phase and the heater resistance will be 7.2 ohms, so the expected current is 28.9 amps when the heater is powered. The temperature controller implements a PID loop that determines the appropriate power level (between 0-100%) to be applied to the heater based on the difference between setpoint and the measured temperature. The output to the heater (through the solid-state relay) is time-proportioned, with a default time base of one second. With this being the case, the SSR repeatedly turns ON and then OFF every second, with the ON time (fraction of a second) determined by the calculated power level.
I have used this control method many times over the years. I have always used individual wires (of the appropriate ampacity) for the heater power circuit. I have never used shielded cable. While I have avoided running these wires with circuits that I consider very sensitive, I have often run them in the same conduit as encoder cables, although my encoder cables are always shielded. In these conduits, I have also included wires used to switch solenoid valves and to bring signals from prox switches into PLC inputs. I have never run into problems that seemed to be noise related.
I am working on a new project in which I will be using a VFD. From what I've read, VFD's are known to create noise and it is generally recommended that one uses a high-quality shielded VFD rated cable so as to avoid noise related issues. This made me wonder how a heater control circuit like I've described above would compare to the power cable that connects a VFD to a motor in terms of how much noise it is likely to emit.
On my current project, I am just wondering if I should take more precaution in keeping my heater power wires separated from other circuits than I have in the past.
Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Paul