Rectifier Ac To DC Conversion
Rectifier Ac To DC Conversion
Rectifier Ac To DC Conversion
3-phase rectification is the process of converting a balanced 3-phase power supply into
a fixed DC supply using solid state diodes or thyristors
Three-phase Waveform
The advantage here is that a three-phase alternating current (AC) supply can
be used to provide electrical power directly to balanced loads and rectifiers.
Since a 3-phase supply has a fixed voltage and frequency it can be used by a
rectification circuit to produce a fixed voltage DC power which can then be
filtered resulting in an output DC voltage with less ripple compared to a single-
phase rectifying circuit.
Three-phase Rectification
Having seen that a 3-phase supply is just simply three single-phases
combined together, we can use this multi-phase property to create 3-phase
rectifier circuits.
As with single-phase rectification, three-phase rectification uses diodes,
thyristors, transistors, or converters to create half-wave, full-wave,
uncontrolled and fully-controlled rectifier circuits transforming a given three-
phase supply into a constant DC output level. In most applications a three-
phase rectifier is supplied directly from the mains utility power grid or from a
three-phase transformer if different DC output level is required by the
connected load.
As with the previous single-phase rectifier, the most basic three-phase rectifier
circuit is that of an uncontrolled half-wave rectifier circuit which uses three
semiconductor diodes, one diode per phase as shown.
So how does this three-phase half-wave rectifier circuit work. The anode of
each diode is connected to one phase of the voltage supply with the cathodes
of all three diodes connected together to the same positive point, effectively
creating a diode-“OR” type arrangement. This common point becomes the
positive (+) terminal for the load while the negative (-) terminal of the load is
connected to the neutral (N) of the supply.
Assuming a phase rotation of Red-Yellow-Blue (VA – VB – VC) and the red
phase (VA) starts at 0o. The first diode to conduct will be diode 1 (D1) as it will
have a more positive voltage at its anode than diodes D2 or D3. Thus diode
D1 conducts for the positive half-cycle of VA while D2 and D3 are in their
reverse-biased state. The neutral wire provides a return path for the load
current back to the supply.
120 electrical degrees later, diode 2 (D2) starts to conduct for the positive half-
cycle of VB (yellow phase). Now its anode becomes more positive than diodes
D1 and D3 which are both “OFF” because they are reversed-biased. Similarly,
120o later VC (blue phase) starts to increase turning “ON” diode 3 (D3) as its
anode becomes more positive, thus turning “OFF” diodes D1 and D2.
Then we can see that for three-phase rectification, whichever diode has a
more positive voltage at its anode compared to the other two diodes it will
automatically start to conduct, thereby giving a conduction pattern of:
D1 D2 D3 as shown.
From the above waveforms for a resistive load, we can see that for a half-
wave rectifier each diode passes current for one third of each cycle, with the
output waveform being three times the input frequency of the AC supply.
Therefore there are three voltage peaks in a given cycle, so by increasing the
number of phases from a single-phase to a three-phase supply, the
rectification of the supply is improved, that is the output DC voltage is
smoother.
For a three-phase half-wave rectifier, the supply voltages VA VB and VC are
balanced but with a phase difference of 120o giving:
VA = VP*sin(ωt – 0o)
VB = VP*sin(ωt – 120o)
VC = VP*sin(ωt – 240o)
Thus the average DC value of the output voltage waveform from a 3-phase
half-wave rectifier is given as:
As the voltage supplies peak voltage, VP is equal to VRMS*1.414, it follows that
VP is equal to VP/1.414 giving 0.707*VP, so the average DC output voltage of
the rectifier can be expressed in terms of the rms (root-mean-squared) phase
voltage giving:
As the supply is 3-phase, the phase to neutral voltage (VP-N) of any phase will
be:
Thus the average DC output voltage from the 3-phase full-wave rectifier is
given as:
Again, we can reduce the maths a bit by correctly saying that for a given line-
to-line RMS voltage value, in our example 127 volts, the average DC output
voltage is:
2. the rectifiers load current.
The output from the rectifier is feeding a 150Ω resistive load. Then using
Ohms law the load current will be: