Solid State Relay
Solid State Relays are
semiconductor equivalents of the electromechanical relay and can be used to
control electrical loads without the use of moving parts
Solid State Relay
Example
Lets assume we want a
micro-controller with a digital output port signal of only +5 volts to control
a 120V AC, 600 watt load (heating element or lamp). For this we could use the
MOC3020 or MOC 3041 opto-triac isolator, but the internal triac can only pass a
maximum current (Itsm) of 1 Amps peak at the peak of a 120V AC supply so an
additional switching triac must also be used.
First lets consider the
input characteristics of the MOC 3020 opto-isolator (other opto-triac are
available). The opto-isolaters datasheet tells us that the forward voltage,
(Vf) drop of the input light emitting diode is 1.2 Volts and the maximum
forward current,(If) is 50mA.
The LED needs about
10mA to light reasonably bright up to its maximum value of 50mA. However the
digital output port of the Micro Controller can only supply a maximum of 30mA.
Then the value of current required lies somewhere between 10 and 30 mA.
Therefore:
Rmax = 380ꭥ and Rmin = 126ꭥ acording to ohms low. (We can use LED Calculator).
Thus a series current limiting resistor
with a value between 126ꭥ and 380ꭥ’s can be used. As the digital output
port always switches +5 volts and to reduce the power dissipation through the
opto-coupler LED, we will choose a preferred resistive value of 240ꭥ’s. This gives an LED forward current of less than 16mA. In this
example,any preferred resistor value between 150ꭥ and 330ꭥ’s would do.
The heating element
load is 600 watts resistive. Using a 120V AC supply would give us a load
current of 5 amperes (I=P/V). As we want to control this load current in both
half cycles (all 4 quadrants) of the AC waveform,we would require a mains
switching triac.
The BTA06 is a 6 amps
(It(rms)) 600 volt triac suitable for general purpose ON/OFF switching of AC
loads,but any similar 6 to 8 amp rated triac would do. Also this switching
triac requires only 50mA of gate drive to start conduction which is far less
than the 1 amp maximum rating of the MOC 3020 opto-isolator.
Consider that the output triac of the opto-isolator has
switch ON at the peak value (90 degree) of the 120Vrms AC supply voltage. This
peak voltage has a value of: 120 x 1.414 = 170Vpk. If the opto-triacs maximum
current (Itsm) is 1 ampere peak, then the minimum value of series resistance
require is 170/1=170ꭥ’s or 180ꭥ’s
to the nearest preferred value. This value of 180ꭥ’s will protect the
opto-coupler output triac, as well as the gate of the BTA06 triac on a 120VAC
supply.
If the triac of the opto-isolator switches ON at the zero
crossover value (0 degree) of the 120Vrms AC supply voltage, then the minimum
voltage required to supply the required 50mA gate drive current forcing the
switching triac into conduction will be: 180ꭥ x 50mA = 9.0 volts. Then the triac
fires into conduction when the sinusoidal Gate-to-MT1 voltage is greater than 9
volts.
Thus the minimum voltage required after the zero crossover
point of the AC waveform would be 9 volts peak with the power dissipation in
this series gate resistor being very small so an 180ꭥ/0.5
watt rated resistor could safely be used. Consider the circuit below.
Schematic shown is for 220V AC supply. So R1 & R2 value
changed for 220V AC supply.
This type of opto coupler configuration forms the basis of a
very simple solid state relay application which can be used to control any AC
mains powered load such as lamps and motors. Here we have used the MOC 3020
which is a random switching isolater. The MOC 3041 opto-triac isolator has the
same characteristics but with built-in zero-crossing detection allowing the
load to receive full power without the heavy inrush currents when switching
inductive loads.
Diode D1 prevents damage due to reverse connection of the
input voltage, while the 56ꭥ resistor R3 shunts any di/dt currents
when triac is OFF eliminating false triggering. It also ties the gate terminal
to MT1 ensuring the triac turns-off fully.
If used with pulse width modulated, PWM input signal, the
ON/OFF switching frequency should be set to less than 10Hz maximum for an AC
load otherwise the output switching of this solid state relay circuit may not
be able to keep up.
Note: This article not written by me. All credits goes to
original author of this article.