Bridge Rectifier Circuit Problem

Thread Starter

Damairia Anugerah

Joined May 23, 2017
5
I am doing a research about Residual Current Device at the moment.
One of the processes is rectifying the output of toroid core wich is an AC voltage and I use a full bridge rectifier to convert it to DC voltage.
Vrms from the rectifier is around 80mV, then I added a capacitor to stabilize the wave but the Vrms output is very big (around 17Volt).
Does the capacitor value give a huge effect on the output?
Because from what I read before, as the capacitor value increase, the more stable wave we get.
Thank you :)
 

DickCappels

Joined Aug 21, 2008
10,661
Edit: I misunderstood the question.

It is unlikely that the output of the rectifier was 80 mv RMS if adding capacitance gets you 17V RMS (or about 17V DC).

The output of the transformer is a probably a little more than 12V RMS. After coming out of the rectifier it should still be 12 V RMS.

Can you give the details of your measurement including the meter used and the meter's settings? Maybe we can figure out where things went wrong.
 
Last edited:

dendad

Joined Feb 20, 2016
4,637
Did you measure the transformer output on DC volts range? It should be ACV.
That may account for your very low reading.
Current transformers usually run into a termination resistor as well so it may be worth adding one to get a more stable reading.
 

Thread Starter

Damairia Anugerah

Joined May 23, 2017
5
Edit: I misunderstood the question.

It is unlikely that the output of the rectifier was 80 mv RMS if adding capacitance gets you 17V RMS (or about 17V DC).

The output of the transformer is a probably a little more than 12V RMS. After coming out of the rectifier it should still be 12 V RMS.

Can you give the details of your measurement including the meter used and the meter's settings? Maybe we can figure out where things went wrong.
Actually, I'm using a toroidal current transformer. The RMS output was 725mV directly measured from toroid core output, then it was rectified using a bridge diode, the rms output measured was 71mV. Then I added a capacitor in order to remove the ripple, but the RMS measured is too big as I've mentioned before.
 

Thread Starter

Damairia Anugerah

Joined May 23, 2017
5
Did you measure the transformer output on DC volts range? It should be ACV.
That may account for your very low reading.
Current transformers usually run into a termination resistor as well so it may be worth adding one to get a more stable reading.
actually it was measured in ACV
 

AlbertHall

Joined Jun 4, 2014
12,625
Actually, I'm using a toroidal current transformer. The RMS output was 725mV directly measured from toroid core output, then it was rectified using a bridge diode, the rms output measured was 71mV. Then I added a capacitor in order to remove the ripple, but the RMS measured is too big as I've mentioned before.
Do you know anything about the waveform of the current?
 

dendad

Joined Feb 20, 2016
4,637
It does sound like it is a spiky waveform as mentioned above. The RSM relationship that most multimeters are calibrated to only applies to sine waves.

Have a look at..
http://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/transformer/current-transformer.html
About a third of the way down it explains why you should never leave them unterminated. The result is very high output volts.
For proper calibration, the current transformer has a design termination resistance, usually fairly low if memory serves me well.
 

DickCappels

Joined Aug 21, 2008
10,661
Do you have a shunt resistor on the output of your transformer?

It would help if you could describe your setuup and measurements in some detail.
 

DickCappels

Joined Aug 21, 2008
10,661
If your current transformer does not have an internal shunt resistor you will need to add an external shunt, otherwise what comes out of the current transformer won't look very much like the current waveform, and things like added capacitance can tune the secondary and make the response "peaky".

Can you tell us anything about your current transformer -make, model, even a photograph?
 
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