reson8r
Electrical
- May 29, 2014
- 11
Hello folks,
I'm looking for a way to measure core loss in RF transformers & inductors. I ran across this PhD dissertation:
which looks thorough and practical, but I'm having trouble understanding some of it. I've tried to contact the author with no success.
Chapter 3 (pg 65) looks like just the ticket. But I don't understand the derivation of eqn 3.1.
[ul]
[li]Why does the core power depend on Ipp (capital I) and not ipp? Capital Ipp is just the current resulting from the magnetizing inductance, which will vary with Lm (fig 3.1), while ipp is the current step due to core loss.[/li]
[li]What does the duty cycle D have to do with core loss? Driving fig 3.1 with a square wave, Rcore sees approximately a rectangular wave across it and should dissipate the same power regardless of D. Where do the D terms come from?[/li]
[/ul]In short, I pretty much don't get anything about eqn 3.1! Any help would be greatly appreciated, and then maybe I'll start understanding eqn 3.2...
Gerrit
I'm looking for a way to measure core loss in RF transformers & inductors. I ran across this PhD dissertation:
which looks thorough and practical, but I'm having trouble understanding some of it. I've tried to contact the author with no success.
Chapter 3 (pg 65) looks like just the ticket. But I don't understand the derivation of eqn 3.1.
[ul]
[li]Why does the core power depend on Ipp (capital I) and not ipp? Capital Ipp is just the current resulting from the magnetizing inductance, which will vary with Lm (fig 3.1), while ipp is the current step due to core loss.[/li]
[li]What does the duty cycle D have to do with core loss? Driving fig 3.1 with a square wave, Rcore sees approximately a rectangular wave across it and should dissipate the same power regardless of D. Where do the D terms come from?[/li]
[/ul]In short, I pretty much don't get anything about eqn 3.1! Any help would be greatly appreciated, and then maybe I'll start understanding eqn 3.2...
Gerrit