11-01-2013 01:17 PM
Is this an academic assignment? If so, I will not give you a complete solution, but I will provide some hints and suggestions.
A more conventional way of describing a circuit like this would be: A constant current source with output current = 1 A and a compliance voltage range of 0 to +32 VDC.
Is the protection fuse intended to protect the 220 VAC source or the output?
1. You will need to sense the current. A series resistor is simple and inexpensive but adds a voltage drop. If connected on the high side (the point which can go to 32 V), a level shifter may also be needed. On the low side it makes going to zero volts at the output difficult (although not impossible). Hall effect devices may overcome some of those difficulties but theyhave noise and drift problems.
2. The system will require feedback comparing the measured current to a reference which represents the 1 ampere target current. The details depend on the sensing circuit, accuracy, stability, and other parameters.
3.Consider the power dissipation. It will almost certainly exceed 32 W at some operating point. Many simulators have limited or no capability to model the power and thermal effects.
4. Consider how the circuit works at zero volts output. Many circuits work well down to 1-2 V but not below that. You may nedd a negative power supply or bias voltage for some parts of the circuit.
Lynn
11-02-2013 01:29 AM - edited 11-02-2013 01:40 AM
It is not an academic assignment. Fuse protection is for protecting supply from burning due to sudden high input voltages. i just want to make it for my own purposes. please help and suggest me a schematic which fulfil my requirements... 😞 😞
11-02-2013 01:04 PM
I have designed similar circuits, although not with your exact combination of requirements. I do not have a schematic available to post.
I estimate that it would take me 30-40 hours to design a circuit to meet your requirements. At this time I cannot spend that much time on a free project.
Lynn
02-09-2018 07:37 AM
Hi...Your circuit look good, the only thing missing from your simulation is "an analog Ground". Connect an analog ground that will provide a reference for the simulation and you will be good.
I just downloaded your simulation file and added the Analog Ground and the Convergence Error disappeared...the simulation was good.