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High Current Linear Regulated Bench Power Supply

On this page, some aspects of the construction of a linear regulated bench power supply using the 2SC2922 power
transistors are discussed.

All started with a high power transformer rated with 26,5V AC and 8.5A current which I could get hands on for 5€ at
a trade fair, some industry spare stock high capacity capacitors for a bargain and a heavy duty metal case from a
230V/115V transformer which I got for free. Since I only owned a commercial 30V/2.5A adjustable power supply up
to then, the wish for the possibility to provide higher currents was imminent.

There are many schematic available on the internet, but as soon as you exceed 3A current, there are not so many
examples left. It becomes even worse when you require an adjustable current limiter down to zero and maybe also
voltage regulation down to zero. The main issue is the lack of information whether the stated power/current can be
drawn continuously and if the design is really short-circuit-proof (without using fold-back-current limiting). My first
attempt was the LM723 variant of the variable 0..30V regulated power supply for 20A max. published on
www.pocketmagic.net (which is a page worth looking at for random high current/high voltage projects). Since it uses
the LM712 chip it is a temptingly simple design but voltage can only be adjusted down to +2V and the maximum
operating voltage is 37V which is below the peak rectified idle voltage of my transformer (note that all parts between
the transformator and the regulating transistors must be sized for the peak idle voltage of your transformer (which is
approx. 1.10 x √2 x the rated voltage (1.10 is a conservative guess as transformator factor for high power transistors
but can be higher for transformators with less iron inside (mine was 1.06 for example - just measure the idle voltage
and multyply by √2 for the peak current)))). Despite those drawbacks, I built the PCB but there were several (for me)
not solvable issues:

1. The LM723 does not provide hight voltage accuracy. As it


was measured in Joshua Brookleys senior project Current
Tracking Power Supply for Sensor Calibration the LM723
suffers over 10% voltage drop at 30mA load, although it is
rated for 150mA source current. With the low gain of the used
TIP3055 power transistors these 30mA base driving current are
easily exceeded with 10A output current at the second stage. I
have not verified this troublesome result on the isolated LM723
but I can verifiy very poor output voltage stability under load.
Due to the presence of only very few external parts in this
design, it can not easiliy be blamed on anything except the
LM723 itself. The untolerable voltage drop could be detected
directly at the output (Pin 10) with constant voltage input (Pin Current Tracking Power Supply for Sensor Calibration,
4) and non-critical current limit input (Pin 2 << 0.65V). Joshua Brookley, California Polytechnic State University
2. The current limitier on the initial design sets in at 4.4A on its lowest setting as 0.65V drop on the 0.15R current
sense resistors. Increasing the resisitor would easily reduce this limit to any desired value but the output impedance
of the power supply would be increase by this to unacceptable values (so reducing the maximum output voltage of
the power supply under high currents). I tried to trigger the 0.65V on Pin 2 with comparators (LM393) and especially
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with the LT1789-1 instrumentation amplifier (basically working with separate low-side current sensing) but all
functional attemps ended in heavy oscillations due to the (slow) input amplifiers and the (fast) LM723 current
limiter. Following this thread I tried several variants to boost Pin 2 voltage by the voltage drop over a constant
current source as described in this schematic. It basically worked but since no solution for the shortcoming of 1) was
at hand, I skipped this design. There was simply no use for a regulated high power supply which would not regulate
adequately under high power. It might be suitable to power regular devices but for an accurate laboratory bench
power supply the need for a perfect voltage regulation and reliable current limitation is out of question.

After this excursion I spent some time searching for a more suitable design. On a co-workers advice I was looking
for a modular design with independent voltage and current regulation circuits. Next to some commercial designs of
the analogue age (which are mostly to complex to build at home) I found a very promising design (PCB to the left)
which my variant is based on: the NT 30V-15A power supply of H. Mauz which he has thankworthily published on
www.hpm-elektronik.de It was developed for 30V and 15A continuous current and has three separate PCBs for the
regulator, thermal management and control and a TRIAC-pre-regulator. All in all this has turned out to be a very
mature design and my simplified version of it worked as it should right after assembly. Many thanks to the tidious
investment of time and effort in this power supply and the kindness to make it publically available in the internet.

The built power supply (PCB to the right) is a reduced variant which uses only one 115x125mm PCB for the power
supply including a simple thermal control (using an opening bimetal switch on the heat sink to activate fan cooling
(connected to the THS pins)). The rectifying capacitors are removed from the PCB (I mounted them to the case for
sturdiness). Also the base and emitter resistors were moved from the PCB to the transistors on the heat sink. The
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schematics below are adjusted for my special case of 26.4V/10A output and it does not have any pre-regulators any
more. To be able to drive the fan directly from the onboard low-power transformer, I selected the next bigger
transformer from this series. There are two new LEDs on the front panel. The green light is on when the thermal
control is powered (running) but the heat-sink is cooler than the bimetal switching temperature. The red light signals
the overheat-condition where the fan is turned on until the cut-off temperature of the switch is reached. Until then,
the green LED is flashing with the tachometer signal (FAN-T pin) of the 3-pin-CPU-fan so you are warned when
something is blocking the fan or it is not running as intended.

Next to 99% of the brilliant power supply schematic, some design points which I found well solved in the original
design are specially mentioned and overtaken. These are (not concluding) the supressor capacitors at the bridge
recitifier, the soldered brass nuts for the high power connectors to the PCB and the use of the precision shunt
resistors with separate sense pins and the TL431 shunt regulator.

One thing I specially paid attention to are the potentiometers. The original design proposes the use of 10-turn
potentiometers which are a precise and economic solution to a fine adjustment of voltage and current. Every person
that worked with high power supplies learned sooner or later that things burn up quite quick at 10 Amperes and you
might run into the case that you have to shut down the voltage or current limit very quickly - a long way with a 10-
turn poti. A possible solution is to use an output-disable function (which could be added easily to the relais K1) or
separate coarse/fine potentiometers. The typical coarse/fine arrangment has the drawback that the influence of the
fine resistor is zero at one end of the scale so I decided for a special arrangment which allows an adjustment at the
upper and lower end of the scale at the same time. You can find more information about that topic here: [ A different
approach to coarse/fine adjustment] I measured the fine adjustment range for voltage and current of my design so
you can get an idea of the adjustment range at both ends of the scale:

Measurement of voltage fine adjustment range:

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Measurement of current fine adjustment range:

I also made some basic static measurements for the voltage/current continuity under load and thermal stability. These
data series have been recorded using Unitrend UT-61d multimeters with a data rate of approx. two Hertz so this is
more or less a rough long-term measurement than an oscilloscope analysis and true dynamic effects could not be
documented. Anyway it was sufficient to evaluate the quasi-static regulation quality and the resulting charts can be
found below for your information. The blue line is the voltage in Volts, the red line the current in Amperes.
For an optimised measurement of the regulation characteristics under load, a constant resistance dummy load is
required. True constant resistors for powers of up to 300W are expensive and hard to find. As an affordable
alternative which does not dwindle into an own project, I used 4 halogen light bulbs for 12V/50W which I connected
and deconnected in different variations. See here [High power resistive dummy loads] for more details.
At the moment of connecting the bulb glowing filament is cold and has very low resistance but heats up in fractions
of a second to its rated power/resistance. I connected the bulbs manually with temporay alligator clamp laboratory
wires so arcing could not be prevented, especially at disconnecting, which should be kept in mind when observing
the voltage peaks at the current steps below.

Voltage regulation at 5V with 1,2,3,4 lamps in parallel:

My assumption is that the current temporarely exceeded 10A for less than 0.5s at the steps to 7.4A and 9.7A so that
this was not detected with the 2 Hz sampling rate. The Current regulation has set in and caused the (longer lasting)
drop in the voltage. More insight could only be axtracted with true oscilloscope measurements and higher sampling
rates.

Voltage regulation at 12V with 2 lamps in serial and 4 lamps 2-serial-2-parallel:

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Voltage regulation at 26V with 2 lamps in serial and 4 lamps 2-serial-2-parallel:

All in all, the influence on the voltage was less than 3mV at a time 1.5s after connection of the load change, which is
a very satisfiable voltage continuity.

Temperatur control and thermal stability:

The fan sets in at 58°C and shuts off at 43°C, pretty close to the rated 60°C/45°C of the bimetal switch. The power
supply was operated at its max. output current of 9.7A at 4.84V for 10 minutes. During that period, the heat sink
reached 58°C after approx. 6 minutes and 20 seconds (measured with a thermocouple at the side of the heat sink,
outside of the fan airflow) and the bimetall switch turned on the fan. In the remaining 4 minutes, the temperature of
the heatsink already declined to 57°C which indicates thermal stability of the regulator with active cooling. Since the
transformer is only rated for 8.5A I reduced the output current continously in 2A-steps down to 6A when my thermal
fuse in the primary transformator shut off at 75°C. Therefore this test ended at this point. The active cooling with the
low-noise 140mm fan seems to work fine but the warning that can be found on many sites which are dedicated to
power supplies remains true: the nominal rating of transformers should be some a good bit higher than the required
output current. The poor convection in my packed casing does not seem to ease this.

Pictures

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Hopefully helpful advice

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Some brief advise for those who plan to build a power supply on their own:

Use a big casing. Although anything worked fine for me (except maybe thermal convection) with my tiny case, I
don't like the fact that I do not exactly know where the cables run when I finally managed to close the case with no
cables sticking out. A small case has its advantages regarding handyness, but it gets heavy anyway from the other
parts like the transformer and heat sink you will need, so it seems to be better to have enough space for a
professionell, doubtless cable routing.

Use a big heat sink for active (fan) cooling. Since forced convection increases the power dissipation you can get big
temperature gradients so be sure to have a good and not too long heat-conducting path from the transistors to the fan
side.

Use a nicely oversized transformer. Since there are power losses everywhere and the power rating of transformers
was most likely determined under free convection (and not stoved into a closed case) and maybe for duty-cycles less
than 100%, you will need some heavy reserve for continuous power consumption.

Don't use cheap chinese digital voltmeters. The one I used was available for 10€ (including shipping from china). It
does its job - partwise. There is one input for voltage and one input for current, but only one common ground. So,
depending on how you connect it, you either have the voltage drop of the shunt included (which is up to 200mv
although it was rated for 10A) in the displayed voltage, or the current somehow magically divides between the
voltage and current sense wires which gives you unrealistic low displayed currents. This is not exactly high
precision. Better use separate displays or better combined displays.

Downloads
Schematic [Board Version 1.1]
Parts list (not complete, use with caution) [OpenDocument-Spreadsheet] [PDF]
Board files [Sprint v6.0, Board Version 1.1] [Gerber, Board Version 1.1] [JPG, Board Version 1.1]

Helpful links
[Current sensing tutorial using OP-Amps]

[Trifolium power supply design manual]

[ PocketMagic: Variable 0..30V regulated power supply for 20A max.]

[Original Power supply by H. Mauz]

[ Back...]

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