Hi Grahame,
I don't know if this is of any help but if you want to go for the $1 solution I assume you like to test things with parts you already have lying around. I was thinking, you could use 2 optocouplers in series so that each carries 1kV. The only "problem" is that you need to have a power supply available between the 2 optocouplers that can carry a 1kV working voltage. For testing you could use a 9V battery, or a DC/DC converter as in attached drawing. The two 10M resistors make sure each opto carries half the total isolation voltage.Cheers,Michel
on Dec 01, 2013, Grahame Marsh <graham...@googlemail.com> wrote:
On 01/12/2013 09:32, Matthew Smith wrote:
> Quoth Grahame Marsh at 2013-12-01 19:18 ...
>
>> Thank you for the paper it has helped a lot - if I have read it
>> correctly, the best performance is a catagory 3 opto coupler can stand
>> off 1kVDC for > 100 000 hrs. So it looks like my search for a part ends
>> 'cause there is no such part... back to the drawing board.
>
I hadn't thought too much about the 6N137 isolation wear
problem, beyond just choosing a manufacturer whose specs seemed to have the
highest isolation rating in terms of voltage. I did notice in passing that
they also specified 1 minute at that voltage - and just assumed this is the
UL rating methodology (by which they certify and/or compare different
units), and doesn't reflect actual operating conditions.
I did read somewhere that the isolation survives far better under a unipolar
and constant potential than a fluctuating, bipolar voltage (crossing zero).
At least in this case, we don't have pulses or fluctuation of any kind
involved! My models built so far haven't broken down - yet...
But Grahame - fantastic that you found this part and I'll definitely be trying it out at the next opportunity!
Aaron
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<snip> that they would never fail.<snip>
Grahame
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