I decided to start this topic because I noticed some problems designing a high current power supply.
For electrolysis we need a high amperage but low voltage. If no special transformer is available, you can add new secondary windings to a microwave oven transformer (MOT).
I did this and wound two parallel secondary windings onto the MOT core. The wires are 16mm? PVC insulated copper cables. The addition gives 32mm? - enough aerea for 200A. The windings consist of five turns only and give 4,3VAC each.
The main problem is the rectifier. Across a diode you will measure aproximately 0,7V. Each bridge rectifier has two diodes in the current path so you will have a voltage drop of 1,4V over the bridge.
If you carry a current of 200A over the bridge rectifier there will be 1,4V*200A=280W lost power!
The second disadvantage is that 4,3VAC will give 6VDC when rectified and smoothed down with capacitors.
THIS IS WRONG!!
There are 1,4V to be substracted and 4,6V will be the resulting voltage we can use. Theese 4,6V @ 200A give a power of 920W.
When comparising the uesd and the lost power, we get a efficiency of approx 75% ( 920W/(920W+280W)=76,6% ). The transformer itself does his very best to dissipate some power too.
I found that 4,6V is quite low - my actual experimental cell runs at 4,9V and I would like the voltage to be a bit higher.
SECOND WAY:
I think I will use windings in series and reach 8,6VAC@100A. After rectifying and smoothing I will have 12,2VAC with 1,4V loss. This gives 10,8V.
The next step is to run two cells in series. Each cell will then be operated at 5,4V. This is what I wanted because you need this value of voltage to prepare perchlorates.
The rectifying efficiency increases to about 88%.
Another advantage is the lower current. This gives the possibility to use standard rectifiers.
There is one problem left: I dont understand the sign on top of the MOT.
First the MOT is called to be a 500W transformer, then the primary power consumption is said to be 990VA and last but not least the secondary Power output is said to be 1773 VA. The heat winding for the magnetron is not interesting since it delivers under 40VA.
That is impossible but I think the 1773VA are realistic (it was a 700W microwave oven and the efficiency of a microwave oven is too low to be worth any discussion).
Any ideas?
MfG
newtoolsmith
Edited by newtoolsmith, 03 October 2006 - 09:46 AM.