Power Supplies 683
that each switch operates at one-half the ramp frequency
or 20 kHz.
The addition of a triac preregulator and associated
control circuit improves regulation and ripple. The triac
is a bidirectional device and is usually connected in
series with one side of the input primary. Whenever a
gating pulse is received, the triac conducts current in a
direction that is dependent on the polarity of the voltage
across it. The goal is to control the triac so that the
bridge rectifier output (dc input to the switches) is held
relatively constant. This is accomplished by a control
circuit that issues a phase-adjusted firing pulse to the
triac once during each half-cycle of the input ac. The
control circuit compares a ramp function to a rectified ac
sine wave to compute the proper firing time for the triac.
Although the addition of the preregulator circuitry
increases complexity, it provides three important
benefits:
- By keeping the dc input to the switches constant, it
permits the use of more readily available lower
voltage switching transistors.
2. The coarse preregulation it provides allows the main
regulator to achieve a finer regulation.
3. Through the use of slow-start circuits, the initial
conduction of the triac is controlled, providing an
effective means of limiting input surge current.
19.4.4 Phase-Controlled Regulated Power Supplies
In the phase-controlled supply, the pass element is
switched on and off at line frequency and controls the
output voltage by a varying pulse width. This is most
often accomplished by using an SCR as the pass ele-
ment. By delaying the firing point of the SCR 1 in each
cycle, the output voltage can be varied, Fig. 19-15.
SCR 1 is fired by applying a voltage to the gate. The
voltage is obtained by C 1 charging through R 2 and the
ballast lamp. When the gate firing voltage is reached
across C 1 , SCR 1 fires. Once the SCR 1 is on, it remains
on until its anode voltage goes to zero, which is during
the second half of the cycle. When SCR 1 is on, C 1 dis-
charges and remains discharged until the phase of the
Figure 19-14. Switching supply with push-pull transistors and feedback for regulation.
D
Input
rectifier
Regulator
switches
Output rectifier/filter
Voltage
comparison
amplifier
Turn-on
comparator
Steering
logic
40 kHz
ramp
generator
Pulse width modulator (IC chip)
Mod drive Q 1
Mod drive Q 2
Vref
Q 1
Q 2
Reference
and bias
supplies
Vac
Vdc
+
Rtx
Rtx
Vcontrol
Ramp Ramp
(40 kHz)
Turn-on comp
output
Mod drive, Q 1
(20 kHz)
Mod drive, Q 2
(20 kHz)
Vcontrol
A
B
C
D
E
Q 1 on
Q 2 on
A
C
B
Switch outputs,
transformer
primary
Vref
RP
Sample
E
Vref