September 12, 2012
Thermocouples and their leads often
have to detect open-circuit or short-circuit faults. However, it is very
difficult to distinguish a valid millivolt temperature signal from an
open/short-circuited thermocouple, which generates a very similar signature at
the input. The conventional solutions employ concepts based on tone
generation/reflection or current-source circuits. This may prove to be costly,
particularly in low-cost applications like automotive designs.
The circuit in the figure shows a low-cost solution based on a
transistor switch (Q1). The transistor is off under normal conditions, when the
differential amplifier built around U1 amplifies the thermocouple signal. The
microcontroller periodically tests for a possible open-circuit condition by
momentarily switching Q1 on and monitoring the amplifier output. When Q1 is
switched on during normal condition, it injects a fixed dc signal onto the
thermocouple signal (determined by R10, R4, and R5). This pumps a dc current
through the thermocouple resistance, injecting an additional differential
signal input across the thermocouple.
In turn, this
causes a moderate increase at amplifier U1’s output (compared to when Q1 is
off). If Q1 is switched on, then under short-circuit conditions at the
thermocouple input terminals of the amplifier, U1 does not change at all
(compared to the Q1 off condition).
Under open-circuit conditions at the thermocouple, U1
automatically gets configured into a unity gain buffer. Hence, an increase of
few volts appears at the output of the U1, which is now a unity gain buffer
(determined by R4, R5, and R1). The microcontroller recognizes this increase of
a few volts (compared to the Q1 off condition) to correctly detect the
open-circuit condition.
Diodes D1, D2, and so on allow this technique to be
shared across multiple thermocouple amplifiers in a single application. Resistors
R1 and R2 protect U1’s inputs against an accidental short circuit of
thermocouple wires to the positive supply line, which is possible in automotive
applications, and can be omitted if not required in your application.
In summary, switching transistor Q1 on results in a
moderate increase, no change, or a large increase at U1’s output, depending on
whether the thermocouple is in no-fault, short-circuit, or open-circuit
conditions, respectively, enabling the microcontroller to detect the condition.
Fuente : Electronic Design
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario