Back .

SSTC Theory Discussion

Edited/Updated:  October 23, 2004

June 22, 2004.   I have added some material, and pictures showing the frequency and time responses of the trial design.  http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/sstc.html Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz

June 23, 2004.  Original poster:  Marco.Denicolai@tellabs.com

Q.  Hello Antonio, I find very interesting this new (at least to me) starting point to design a TC. If I get it right, you design a Butterworth bandpass filter with given center frequency and end up with a setup where L1*C1=L2*C2.

A.  Yes. That design reduces the network to an ideal transformer.

Q.  But isn't it true that the voltage vs. frequency diagrams is the usual one? I mean two peaks, more or less separated depending on the coupling coefficient (if I recall)?

A.  Yes, and really, the response has two peaks if the driver impedance is negligible. The two peaks would reduce to one if the impedance of the driver were identical to the designed input resistance of the network.  The network can also be designed so there is only one peak when the output loading is as designed, but it seems that this design is not so good. See the plots at the end of my page.  http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/sstc.html


Q.  I am just wondering, isn't it so that if one wants to drive a traditional TC with an SSTC driver (remove the RSG, use an IGBT/FET bridge), the correct drive frequency is simply f=1/(2*PI)*SQRT(1/(L1*C1)), supposing that L1*C1=L2*C2?

A.  Hummm. Looking better at my equations I see that L1*C1=L2*C2 is valid for the prototype filter, and that for it the driving frequency is really as you say. But observe that in the network with transformer, Lb*Cb = (1-kab^2)*La*Ca = L1*C1.  So, in this network the primary and secondary circuits are -not- tuned to the same frequency!  The driving frequency is the resonant frequency of the secondary circuit alone. The primary circuit is tuned to a slightly lower frequency. Strange, but true.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

June 24, 2004.  Original poster:  steve.conner@optosci.com

Q.  So, in this network the primary and secondary circuits are -not-tuned to the same frequency!   The driving frequency is the resonant frequency of the secondary circuit alone. The primary circuit is tuned to a slightly lower frequency. Strange, but true.

A1.  Interesting. This matches with experimental results. The ISSTC people found that the primary has to be tuned ~15% lower. I thought it was streamer loading but...Steve C.

A2.  True for any tuned coupling network of this configuration, such as coupling of a tuned transmitter output to a tuned load.  Of course, there's streamer loading too.  Ed.

A3.  June 24, 2004.  Probably a combination of the two things. In the ideal case what happens is that at one side the tuning is with the "magnetizing inductance" of the transformer, and at the other with the "leakage inductance". With this, for a single frequency excitation, the reactances disappear.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

A4.  June 25, 2004.  I don't think I was ever convinced that streamer loading was a culprit. The typical operation mode is to ring the secondary up until it lets go and one usually designs the secondary to not let go until the bulk of primary energy has reached it (at which point there is little left in the primary to transfer). In my opinion, recent attempts to use matching theory are valid only if one wants to feed a continuous arc in CW operation. * I seriously doubt its validity when applied to either classic disruptive coils or the ISSTC which is pretty much the same thing when examining the operation of the secondary in such coils. Past experience with my disruptive coils often (if not always) showed better results with the primary tuned to what would have been the LSB generated with the tunings equal. This was referred to in the past as "offset tuning" and has appeared in early papers on TCs. I forget which ones but I have seen voltage vs tuning graphs in some of them. I still have those papers buried in a mountain at home.  Malcolm.

* Response 1 (June 25, 2004).  I agree that matching theory is no good for disruptive coils. But for the ISSTC I think it is useful. The ISSTCs built so far have small toroids with a breakout point, and a relatively long burst length, that carries on after breakout. Scope traces I have seen show the primary current ringing up relatively quickly, and then levelling off at breakout.

This I think of as a "quasi-CW" ISSTC, and it can potentially have a "bang energy" much greater than a disruptive coil with the same components, as the inverter feeds the discharge directly.

The opposite is a "quasi-disruptive" ISSTC, with a big toroid, full-rated tank capacitor, no breakout point, and the inverter switching off around breakout time so it never feeds the discharge directly. It has roughly twice the bang energy of a disruptive coil with the same components.

Whether the "quasi-CW" thing is a red herring, will have to be proved by experiment, by measuring the tank capacitor voltage and seeing how the stored energy compares to the bang energy. But, I think even if it turns out that all practical ISSTCs are quasi-disruptive, the matching theory will still get you into the right ballpark.  Steve C.

Follow up to above response.  June 28, 2004.  Original poster:  m.j.watts@massey.ac.nz

Hi Steve, What I was suggesting is that in the case of the ISSTC, matching to the *unloaded* resonator would, in my opinion, be more useful than matching to a load.  Malcolm.

Response to above post.  June 28, 2004.  I can't get my head around the combination of the concepts "matching" and "unloaded". Matching, to me, means adjusting a circuit for most efficient transfer of real power from a source to a load. If there is no load, then all the math goes out the window. There just isn't anything to match. **

**( There is always something to match. As you noted below, resonator esr is at a minimum (but never zero, even for a superconducting structure) as the radiaton (sp?) resistance climbs and this is a function of resonator size and operating frequency. The point is, matching to this gives a real resistance to match to (if one does indeed want to indulge in matching) which then makes some design procedure for the matching network possible. Such a match would give very high output voltages given the high shunt impedance that terminates the resonator.  I think this answers the points you make below.

Your point about matching to the discharge thereby allowing the driver to boost the bang energy on the fly is well taken. However, two things get in the way of this plan as I see it: - the discharge impedance is ill-defined and dependent on a number of variables, available power being one of them and I can't see how you can design a matching network to operate correctly given this - the driver has to scale with the planned coil output in order to cope and do useful things which means more expense. Allowing the resonator to ring up to a desired energy level and then cutting the driver off when a discharge has begun (might?) relieve this burden. Maybe not given the dreaded phase reversal which would then occur.

Antonio writes: Original poster: "Steve Conner" <steve.conner@optosci.com>

> It doesn't :) Antonio presumably used a sine wave generator set to the resonant frequency in his sim. But the feedback drive systems that we use just flip their own phase whenever the resonant system tries to flip over and push energy back. So, an ISSTC could theoretically ring up to infinity > (eep).

Interesting consideration. But if the system is trying to return energy to the driver, and the phase of the driver is inverted to match the current, it will extract energy from the system faster. A simulation shows that this indeed happens, with the secondary voltage dropping twice faster. But at the same time the driver is pushing more energy into the primary circuit, and at the next phase reversal the output voltage is two times larger. The input current and output voltage waveforms resemble beating waveforms, but two times larger+ after each notch (lossless case).  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz. + (The input current and output voltage waveforms resemble beating waveforms, but two times larger after each notch (lossless case).   Oops... Larger by the same amount at each beat.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz).

I note there are two "ifs" included in the first sentence of the reply.  There fore, the explanation in the subsequent sentences is conditional.  Tesla obviously didn't believe this would happen and I'm at a loss to see why it should too. Tesla of course did not have the precision of modern electronics at his disposal and his endeavors may well have been doomed to failure given the inadequate technology of his day.  Malcolm).

End of ** insert.

If you have a plan for getting round this problem, I would be _very_ interested to see it :-o

BTW, I believe the base impedance of an unloaded resonator is just the resistance of the wire (counting skin effect, radiation resistance etc) IOW, it's a loss resistance, and not any impedance that has any significance as to the spark producing properties of the coil. Matching to this makes no sense, IMO, and is a bad idea.

Try a little thought experiment- A superconducting Tesla resonator would have a base impedance of zero
* at resonance, so do you think it would be impossible to drive, and fail to produce any sparks? Common sense says the opposite: it would work just like an ordinary one, but better.

*Not counting radiation resistance, which is going to be pretty minuscule anyway.  Steve C.

Response 2.  June 25, 2004.  Really, considering that:
1) The load is seriously nonlinear, and only effectively appears after breakout.
2) Most systems are not operated continuously, but in short bursts, maybe just short enough to build up enough energy in the secondary system for breakout.  Something that shall be looked in the design is then what happens while the output voltage is rising, in a condition of, ideally, no load. The ideal would be to always present a resistive impedance to the driver while in this condition.  But this is precisely what happens if the load is removed from the "matching theory" design. The input current is always in phase with the input voltage while the output voltage is rising. If the energy is not spent, after some cycles, the output voltage reaches a maximum (of about two times the designed output voltage) and starts to fall.  While it is falling the input current is in opposite phase to the input voltage, returning energy to the power supply.  I will see if I can work out the details of the curious waveforms that appear, and see if they are naturally in this way, or are forced to this way by the matched design, that appears to work well in this aspect too.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz

Response to above post.  June 28, 2004.  I think matching to the base of an unloaded resonator is a most fruitful approach in a number of respects:

- noting that a capacitor that is running down in a traditional disruptive system still continues to pump the secondary until it is empty (given ideal k for this to happen), I see no reason why a drive system operating in what is effectively CW mode should ever suffer the phase reversal inherent in the traditional endpoint of energy transfer.
^
- the way appears to be open for machines to be built to generate enormous voltages in the MV range with very high storage energies to boot with a rather modest drive system (Greg?)
- the ISSTC is a system where shooting for a *high* secondary Q really comes into its own.
- by carefully shaping a breakout point, one can tailor a given secondary to let go before it destroys itself. In fact one can progressively shape it to restrain further and further as confidence rises. A bit like opening up the gap in fact.

I expect the matching to be not-too-critical given the self-adjusting drive frequency together with the transformation of MOhms to a few tens of Ohms by Zo^2.

Again, none of this is really that new. Sloan's CW system worked in much the same way.  Malcolm.

^ It doesn't :) Antonio presumably used a sine wave generator set to the resonant frequency in his sim. But the feedback drive systems that we use just flip their own phase whenever the resonant system tries to flip over and push energy back. So, an ISSTC could theoretically ring up to infinity (eep).  Steve C.

Response to above response.  June 29, 2004.  Interesting consideration. But if the system is trying to return energy to the driver, and the phase of the driver is inverted to match the current, it will extract energy from the system faster.  A simulation shows that this indeed happens, with the secondary voltage dropping twice faster. But at the same time the driver is pushing more energy into the primary circuit, and at the next phase reversal the output voltage is two times larger. The input current and output voltage waveforms resemble beating waveforms, but two times larger after each notch (lossless case).  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz

 Brief recap and answers:  > Original poster:  m.j.watts@massey.ac.nz

> I think matching to the base of an unloaded resonator is a most fruitful approach in a number of respects:
>
> - noting that a capacitor that is running down in a traditional disruptive system still continues to pump the secondary until it is empty (given ideal k for this to happen), I see no reason why a drive system operating in what is effectively CW mode should ever suffer the phase reversal inherent in the traditional endpoint of energy transfer.


The phase reversal appears in the system designed for a resistive load, if the load is removed. The reason is that the excitation is not at one of the resonances, but somewhere between them. I made some plots. See in:
http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/sstc.html.  If the excitation is moved to one of the resonances, there is no phase reversal during the output voltage rise, but in both cases the designed maximum voltage is reached in approximately the same number of cycles. Actually, the faster rise without load is obtained by excitation at the central frequency, and not at the resonances.
***

> - the way appears to be open for machines to be built to generate enormous voltages in the MV range with very high storage energies to boot with a rather modest drive system (Greg?) - the ISSTC is a system where shooting for a *high* secondary Q really comes into its own.

Not necessarily:
The ratio between the effective load resistance and the input resistance determines the maximum voltage gain:  Vout/Vin=sqrt(Rload/Rin).  But as the excitation frequency and the inductances can be chosen in a wide range, the Q for a good secondary don't have to be necessarily very high. In my example, that converts 229 V to 114.6 kV, a voltage gain of 500, the Q of the secondary is just 8.5.

> - by carefully shaping a breakout point, one can tailor a given secondary to let go before it destroys itself. In fact one can progressively shape it to restrain further and further as confidence rises. A bit like opening up the gap in fact.
>
> I expect the matching to be not-too-critical given the self-adjusting drive frequency together with the transformation of MOhms to a few tens of Ohms by Zo^2.
>
> Again, none of this is really that new. Sloan's CW system worked in much the same way.

Even Tesla tried to build "forced response" coils, by using fast gaps, and Fessenden's high frequency generators for radio transmitters were just this same thing.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

*** Response.  June 30, 2004.  I don't know the details of your simulation perhaps I missed something.  For a single frequency excitation of a linear system at steady state the out put is also a single frequency. In the case above in does not mater whether you drive at a frequency in-between or not. i.e. the output must be a constant amplitude sine wave with he same frequency as the input at steady state if the transient has decayed.

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.  I am considering a lossless circuit. The transient never decays, and adds to the steady-state response. In the lossy cases, where a resistive load was considered, the transient is what causes the output to ramp instead of suddenly reaching the steady state value, what would be impossible.  Antonio).

I suspect you may be observing the transient caused by the switch on of the sine wave.  I believe the transient will excite the two poles and produce the two frequencies components of the classical beat envelope that then exponentially decays.  The drive frequency component will  beat with the two transient frequency components until they have decayed.

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.   Yes. The transient is excited by the sudden application of the input sinusoidal voltage (or square wave).  Antonio).

I had thought that it may be possible to utilize the transient in such a way as to significantly increase the final output voltage while maintaining maximum input during the build up phase by picking the appropriate driving frequency. I believe one contributor may have already explored this but it was not clear from his contribution what the relationship of the drive to the two poles was.

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.  At their geometrical mean. If this is not the optimum (apparently is), is quite good.  Antonio).

It would be  interesting to analyze how a base current or field feedback system oscillates  and what its transient behave is.

My own interest is in zero crossing switching/feedback.  Meaning that with a series resonant primary it should be possible to use the zero current point to control the switches and hence guarantee soft switching. At least initially the driving voltage changes direction at the zero crossing points of the input transient current. Such a method could be combined with peak current control i.e. stop switching at the next zero crossing when a given peak current is exceeded.  Such a system may be less prone to self destruction and only requires connection to the driver stage.

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.  It appears possible to just look at the input current, reverting the polarity of the input voltage at each change in direction of the current.  Antonio).

It is  informative to consider steady state conditions and consider steady state matching options. However it may be more important to consider the transient conditions particular for SSTC's that have very high maximum powers relative to average wall plug power. In such systems a steady state conditions may never be reached. This may also be important if soft switching is required. as  even if softswitching is achieved at steady state, will it also be soft during the start up ???

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.  The approach that I described works well too during the output voltage rise. The driving frequency falls precisely at the geometrical mean of the two resonances, and this forces resistive input impedance for any resistive output load, including no load, and even during the initial transient.  Antonio).

Consider the following approach. Lets assume some big beefy igfets say 600A peak current and say an average wall plug current of 20A. Assuming direct switching and pulsed operation with a triangular peak current profile  then that's a 15 to 1 duty cycle. Then lets assume a pulse rate of 120Hz then that's an on time of  556us.   Additionally lets assume interrupter type operation as so the goal is to reach max secondary voltage.  So the matching problem is what configuration will ramp up the driver current to 600Apk in 556us. If we assume 100kHz frequency and a 5kW wall plug power which say translates to a 30 x 6in secondary assume a standard flat primary with a coupling round about 0.2.  How many turns on the primary  and what size/rating of primary cap will get the approximately 42J in to the system via an approximately 100kHz 310V  ramping up to 600Apk in 556us.  Regards, Bob Jones.
 

(response to above statement.  July 1, 2004.  Trying a design:
Imax=600 A.
Vin=310 V peak, square wave.
The input resistance is then (4/pi*310)/600 = 0.6578 Ohms.
556 us corresponds to 55.6 cycles of 100 kHz. A bandwidth around 100/55.6 = 1.7986 kHz would be adequate (not exact).  A problem is that with the matched design the output energy is function of the bandwidth, and so it can't be specified independently of the output energy.
The required bandwidth is:
B=(16/(pi^2*sqrt(2)))*Vin^2/(Rin*Energy)= 634.6 Hz (after dividing by 2pi).
The voltage gain is then determined by the output capacitance:
n=sqrt(sqrt(2)/(Cb*B*Rin))
Assuming 40 pF of secondary+terminal+streamers capacitance:
n=3672

The resulting element values:
Ca: 10.9 nF
La:  233 uH
Lb: 63.3 mH
kab: 0.00449
Cb: 40 pF

Then required bandwidth resulted too narrow, and so the coupling between the coils become too loose. This doesn't look as a realistic design...

To accumulate 42 J in a reasonable time, you need more input current.
Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz).

June 30, 2004.  Original poster:  srward16@hotmail.com

HI, I’ve been trying to follow along here though my electronics training (none) sort of hinders things.

Anyway, thought some of you may be interested in some tests i did with my original ISSTC.  I decided it was time to try primary current feedback to drive the coil.  So how i went about it was put an 90:1 CT (home made) on the output of my H-bridge driver.  The CTs output drives yet another CT (60:1) to basically reduce the current on the output... mainly so I don't overload my driver board with a lowZ feedback source.  Anyway, it works.

A pic of the setup:

http://www.hot-streamer.com/srward16/ISSTC/2004_06_29/100_0068.JPG

I took some pics with various tunings, but it seems my original tuning (used with secondary base feedback) works the best.  The following is the RF output from the secondary coil:

http://www.hot-streamer.com/srward16/ISSTC/2004_06_29/100_0067.JPG

This is PRE-BREAKOUT.  You can see that im turning the bridge off at about 7.5 divisions in that picture.

Here is what happens when i start to get breakout:

http://www.hot-streamer.com/srward16/ISSTC/2004_06_29/100_0066.JPG

Notice that the later half of the envelope looks distorted... i think this correlates with when breakout is achieved (i can reduce the burst length to that point and still hear just a slight crackling).  So indeed the ISSTC system relys on driving lots of *CW-like* power into each spark.  As i turned it up more, it appeared to breakout after just 6 cycles.  Also, i can keep adding cycles to lengthen the sparks, while this is obvious, it seems that this effect was more pronounced with primary feedback than with secondary feedback (but i may need to test this again).  (Malcolm response: In some respects this is really disappointing because it means that current is ramping up in the primary as well as the secondary does it not? If so, it looks like there is no escape from scaling the power supply component capabilities to match an increasing power output (in which case who cares about feeding an established streamer CW). I had thought it would be possible if not likely to prevent the driver from seeing increasing currents like this. One cannot stop a base-drive system from seeing with peak resonator base currents although these are typically far lower than primary currents. So it looks as if in the double-tuned system, the artifacts of double-tuning remain despite a constant feed of power into the primary (Y-N)?)

Also, this is an older shot of the RF output with secondary base feedback:

http://www.hot-streamer.com/srward16/ISSTC/waveforms/100_0074.JPG

Note that its a rather linear ring up, but as you begin to really push the power, it looks like the predictions in Antonios paper (fast ring up and levels off for the rest of the burst).  Steve Ward.  (Malcolm response: I'd like to see what's happening in the primary circuit in that scenario and it would be interesting to see the primary current waveforms for the previous case also).

 Response to above post.  July 1, 2004.  Nice clean waveforms Steve.  Can't wait to see the beast at our Teslathon.  Try some 4 sec time delay photos in a dark room at f3.5.  They should look great.  Dr. Resonance.

 July 1, 2004.  Original poster:  steve.conner@optosci.com

>In some respects this is really disappointing because it means that current is ramping up in the primary as well as the secondary does it not?

Yes, this is exactly what happens. The energy in the primary circuit (1/2*Lp*Ip^2, or 1/2*Cp*Vp^2) ends up roughly equal to the energy in the secondary circuit.

There are two differences though:

1: The energy in the primary mostly empties into the secondary after the inverter shuts down. If we are cynical and say that half of it goes to the secondary and the other half returns to the DC link, then we are still achieving a bang energy 1.5 times greater than a conventional coil with the same primary component ratings.

Response to 1. above:  Right. I also noted that there was no phase reversal present in the oscillogram of the secondary.  Malcolm.

2: If the system runs in the quasi-CW mode, where the top voltage is heavily clamped by breakout, the primary voltage and current will level off.  Therefore, the energy in the primary and secondary circuits is no longer increasing, however the energy transferred to the discharge is still increasing.

This allows for an almost unlimited effective "bang energy" by just increasing the inverter on-time, even though the voltage/current ratings of the primary and secondary are modest.

Response to 2. above:  Sure.  Malcolm.

You can also imagine that it would allow the creation of sparks that were long compared to the length of the resonator, without flashover, and indeed Steve Ward's ISSTCs (and some built by others) do behave like this.

It seems that the way to promote this quasi-CW operation is to use tight coupling (k=0.3).  Steve C.

Response to above statement.  The primary ringing up like that will be a function of loose coupling - i.e. energy is not transferred to the secondary as fast as it is being delivered to the primary. I figured that would be the case anyway but was still surprised to see the beating. I'm not surprised any more considering the relatively low coupling constant. Obviously, the tighter the coupling the better but I realize that only so much is practicable. On the plus side though, it would still seem that the primary L/C ratio can be usefully boosted to keep primary (and device) currents down while recognizing that voltages across the caps and coil would climb significantly.  Malcolm 

July 1, 2004.  Original poster:  steve.conner@optosci.com

>Then required bandwidth resulted too narrow, and so the coupling between the coils become too loose. This doesn't look as a realistic design...

I had real trouble trying to calculate this one too. Doing it as a quasi-disruptive design, using conservation of energy, I ended up with 100uH and 20nF for the primary components, and the primary capacitor would ring to over 44kV.

Using the L-match approach for a CW design, starting with a secondary top impedance calculated from (power input/breakout voltage) I couldn't find a solution at all :( If I wanted a reasonable loaded Q for the primary, the inductance tended to infinity :((

I haven't figured out how to turn the handle on Antonio's method yet :(((

>To accumulate 42 J in a reasonable time, you need more input current.

I agree. AFAIK, Steve Ward's medium sized coil was running about 600A peak, with a 380V DC link, for a ~10J bang energy and 1kW power input.  Steve C.

 July 2, 2004.  Original poster:  dhmccauley@easternvoltageresearch.com

I recently took measurements on my new ISSTC 2 coil.  At 330V DC bus voltage I was getting about 600A peak at 250us PW and 100Hz PRF.  The primary capacitor was about 0.1uF.

I also measured output arc current and measured 36A peak current to a ground rod.  Dan.

July 2, 2004.  Brief recap and response.  > Original poster:  steve.conner@optosci.com
>
>  >Then required bandwidth resulted too narrow, and so the coupling between the coils become too loose. This doesn't look as a realistic design...
>
> I had real trouble trying to calculate this one too. Doing it as a quasi-disruptive design, using conservation of energy, I ended up with 100uH and 20nF for the primary components, and the primary capacitor would ring to over 44kV.

Another problem with too high Q systems. The voltage over the primary capacitor may rise excessively.

> Using the L-match approach for a CW design, starting with a secondary top  impedance calculated from (power input/breakout voltage) I couldn't find a solution at all :( If I wanted a reasonable loaded Q for the primary, the inductance tended to infinity :((

A simple L-match for very high resistance changes results in impractical elements. In that case:  Power input (peak, at the driving frequency): 310*(4/pi)*600=237 kW Breakout voltage: 300 kV If all the power goes to the output: Iload peak)=237/300=790 mA
Rload=300000/0.79=380 kOhms
Input resistance: 310*(4/pi)/600=0.659 Ohms
An L-match network operating at 100 kHz and converting 380 kOhms
to 0.659 Ohms:
Q: 759 !
C: 3180 pF
L: 0.796 mH
This circuit would take forever to reach the steady state.

It's better to make a double L-match, performing two impedance conversions by the same factor:
Q: 27.5
C2 = 115 pF
L2 = 21.9 mH
(These convert 380 kOhms to 500.4 Ohms)
C1 = 87.6 nF
L1 = 28.9 uH
(These convert 500.5 Ohms to 0.695 Ohms)
Looks much better. Reaches 300 kV in 22 cycles (simulated).
The stored energy in C2 reaches 5.18 J.


> I haven't figured out how to turn the handle on Antonio's method yet :(((

Me too ;-) If the design above looks reasonable (even with the quite too large C2), a doubly tuned band-pass design shall be similar:
Rload=380 kOhms, Rin=0.659 Ohms
Voltage gain = sqrt(380000/0.659)=759
Only the bandwidth remains free: Using 5 kHz and the formulas for the doubly terminated filter:
Ca:  85.5 nF
La:  29.7 uH
Lb:  21.3 mH
kab: 0.035
Cb:  119 pF
Almost the same values, and 5.3 J in Cb.
Note the low coupling.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

Brief recap and response.  July 2, 2004.  >It's better to make a double L-match, performing two impedance conversions by the same factor:
>Q: 27.5
>C2 = 115 pF
>L2 = 21.9 mH
>(These convert 380 kOhms to 500.4 Ohms)
>C1 = 87.6 nF
>L1 = 28.9 uH
>(These convert 500.5 Ohms to 0.695 Ohms)

If I understand correctly, an inductively coupled Tesla coil also has a third untuned stage of impedance conversion, of ratio (L2:L1)^2. Did you take this into account in this calculation, or are you just assuming a L-match network base-feeding the secondary? Or have I got it completely wrong?  Steve C.

July 3, 2004.  Response to above post & question.  In this case there is no transformer, just two L-matches in cascade:

. o---L1---+---L2---+---o
.          |        |
.          C1       C2   Rload
.          |        |
. o--------+--------+---o

C2 is the combination between the self-capacitance of L2, the distributed capacitance of the terminal, and streamer capacitance. Quite too large in the example. By using two stages, a high gain system can be built without excessively high Qs.  The version with a transformer can be derived from a cascade of a high-pass L-match and a low-pass L-match, or from a band-pass filter. The cascade above can be designed as a filter too, resulting in "maximally resistive" input resistance, but the design is more complex than in the bandpass case.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

July 3, 2004.  Response to Antonio and Steve C.

I don't have much of a handle on Antonio's method either. Best I can do is that the burst time relates to the step response and the step response is related to the bandwidth of a filter so by picking a particular filter type,  a Butterworth, then using filter theory it can be solved. In a master oscillator configuration some insensitivity to frequency is required whether the flatness of a Butterworth is too flat I don't now.  However a feedback driven system and in particular a drive current feedback  would be more tolerant.

I now believe that during the build up the input will only appear resistive if its driven at the center frequency and in phase with the transient. My initial reaction to this is it is at the minimum in the voltage gain but may be compensated for by changing the turns ratio. If its soft switching we want we have no other option.

I think the reason my design parameters did not work well is that I had fixed the frequency. I think frequency must be reduced so that with reasonable coupling factors the time to the max energy is sufficiently long to get the required energy in.  Ss you suggest  peak current could also be increased.  I assume its a design trade off between long lower current low frequency burst and high current shorter higher frequency burst.

Or putting it an other way for a given peak current and bang energy the burst length is determined which then fixes the maximum frequency.  Bob Jones.

July 3, 2004.  Brief recap and response.  Original poster: "Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz" <acmdq@uol.com.br>

Tesla list wrote:  Original poster: "Bob \(R.A.\) Jones"  a1accounting@bellsouth.net
>
> Response to Antonio and Steve C.
>
> I don't have much of a handle on Antonio's method either. Best I can do is that the burst time relates to the step response and the step response is related to the bandwidth of a filter so by picking a particular filter type,  a Butterworth, then using filter theory it can be solved.

Yes.

> In a master oscillator configuration some insensitivity to frequency is required  whether the flatness of a Butterworth is too flat I don't know.  However a feedback driven system and in particular a drive current feedback  would be more tolerant.

The flatness provides some insensitivity to frequency and errors in the element values, specially in the "resistiveness" of the input impedance.  A matched design with current feedback will self-tune to the right frequency.

>   I now believe that during the build up the input will only appear resistive if its driven at the center frequency and in phase with the transient.

Yes. Specially if the load is varying.

> My initial reaction to this is it is at the minimum in the voltage gain but may be compensated for by changing the turns ratio. If it’s soft switching we want we have no other option.

The central frequency can be a minimum or the maximum, depending on the load. With light load it is a minimum.  With the designed load, in the doubly loaded design, the voltage gain is still a minimum, close to the two maxima at its sides, but the input impedance is maximally resistive (continues to be approximately resistive in all the bandwidth of the filter). The system can also be designed to present a flat maximum at the central frequency, but then the input impedance is not maximally resistive (it is just at the central frequency). With high load, it is a maximum.


> I think the reason my design parameters did not work well is that I had fixed the frequency. I think frequency must be reduced so that with reasonable coupling factors the time to the max energy is sufficiently long to get the required energy in.  Ss you suggest  peak current could also be increased.  I assume its a design trade off between long lower current low frequency burst and high current shorter higher frequency burst.
>
> Or putting it an other way for a given peak current and bang energy the burst length is determined which then fixes the maximum frequency.

Using as parameter the maximum energy stored in the load-side capacitance after the steady state is reached, in the doubly terminated band-pass Butterworth filter design it results as:  E=(Vin*4/pi)^2/(2^(1/2)*B*R)
where Vin is the peak value of the input square wave, B is the filter bandwidth in rad/s, and R is the input resistance. We see then that the energy depends only on the bandwidth, and not in the frequency (w0).  But the number of cycles required for reaching the steady state is about w0/B, and so the output energy is proportional to the number of cycles, as expected, and inversely proportional to the frequency.  Or, it is directly proportional to the burst time, no matter which is the frequency.

This calculation assumes a resistive load with constant value connected all the time, what is not very realistic, but that is close to what happens with a load that is connected only after breakout.

Something that I still don't like is that, for resistive load, there is no mechanism to limit the input current if the load decreases in resistance, other than to stop the driver if the current grows excessively. The input current, however, doesn't change much from cycle to cycle, even if the output is short-circuited, and so a safe control is not difficult.  Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.

Top of Page