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Author Topic: DEC 'Sinewave SI' Solid State Inverter  (Read 3 times)

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DEC 'Sinewave SI' Solid State Inverter
« on: March 17, 2025, 11:09:39 AM »
https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:AP:58a34722-b232-44af-ab62-a91bd6a74506


How does adding a switch and/or another electrode convert the DEC into bidirectional inverter ?

Yes, adding a switch and/or an additional electrode to the Digital Energy Cell (DEC) could allow it to function as a bidirectional inverter.

Here’s a structured approach to achieving this:

1. Understanding the DEC’s Structure

The DEC operates based on capacitive energy storage rather than traditional chemical reactions.

Since it behaves more like a dielectric capacitor, we can exploit switching and electrode arrangements to convert stored energy into alternating or bidirectional flow.

2. Bidirectional Power Flow Concept

A bidirectional inverter needs to:

• Charge the DEC from AC/DC sources.

• Discharge the stored energy back into an AC load or grid.

This requires:

• Switching Circuitry: Converts DC to AC and vice versa.

• Additional Electrode/Control Mechanism:

Allows controlled bidirectional energy flow.

• Synchronization Circuitry: Ensures phase alignment when discharging back into an AC grid.

3. Two Approaches to Bidirectional Inversion

There are two ways to implement this function:


A. Switching Approach (Without Additional Electrode)

• H-Bridge (MOSFET/IGBT-based) Switching:
 
• Use four MOSFETs arranged in an H-bridge to control charge/discharge.

• By toggling the switches, stored DC energy can be converted into AC.

• PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) for AC Waveform:

• A microcontroller (like an STM32 or ESP32) generates a PWM signal to create a sine wave output.

Bidirectional Power Flow:

• When receiving power, the switch rectifies incoming AC to charge the DEC.

• When discharging, the switch converts stored energy into AC.

✅ Pros: No need for physical changes to the DEC.

❌ Cons: Requires complex electronic switching.

B. Additional Electrode for Direct Charge/Discharge Control

Adding an extra electrode inside the DEC allows:

• Separate charging and discharging paths.

• Dynamic polarization control, acting as a phase-controlled capacitor.

• Electrostatic Discharge Modulation for frequency-dependent response.

Implementation

Introduce a Floating Electrode

• Instead of two electrodes (anode/cathode), introduce a third electrode.

• This allows for controlled charge displacement.

Charge Redistribution

• The electrode could shift polarity dynamically, allowing energy to oscillate like an LC circuit.

AC Frequency Modulation

• By coupling the third electrode with a switching circuit, we can modulate charge flow in sync with an AC waveform.

✅ Pros: Electrically efficient, can directly generate AC-like behavior.

❌ Cons: Requires modifying DEC structure, potential dielectric leakage issues.

4. Hybrid Approach (Switching + Additional Electrode)

The most optimized method would combine both:

• Use H-Bridge switching for power control.

• Introduce an additional electrode to improve charge modulation.

• Implement a feedback loop (via sensors) to adjust voltage and frequency.

This would make DEC behave like an electrostatic bidirectional energy buffer, efficiently converting stored energy into AC with minimal losses.

5. Prototype Development & Simulation

To verify feasibility:

• Simulate in LTSpice or MATLAB Simulink.

• Use a high-voltage dielectric test setup to measure efficiency.

• Test with grid-tied inverters for power synchronization.

Would you like a schematic for this?

Yes please

It looks like I can't generate the schematic directly using schemdraw in this environment.

However, I can describe the design in a way that you can implement it in KiCad, EasyEDA, or LTSpice.

Schematic for the Bidirectional Inverter-Enabled DEC

1. Components

• Digital Energy Cell (DEC) (acts as a high-voltage capacitive storage unit)

• Additional Floating Electrode (to enhance bidirectional charge flow)

• H-Bridge Circuit (to switch between charge/discharge modes)

• 4x MOSFETs (IRF540, or high-voltage alternatives)

• 2x Diodes (Schottky, for fast switching protection)

• Gate Driver Circuit (e.g., IR2110)

• Microcontroller (ESP32, STM32, or similar)

• AC Synchronization Components (for grid-connected inverters)

• Optocouplers (to isolate the microcontroller from high-voltage AC)

• Voltage Sensors (ZMPT101B)

• Current Sensors (ACS712)

2. Functional Overview

Charge Mode (AC/DC Input to DEC)

• AC is rectified and stored in the DEC.

• The additional electrode helps control charge dispersion.

• MOSFETs in H-Bridge regulate power flow.
• Discharge Mode (DEC to AC Load/Grid)

• H-Bridge switches modulate the DEC output into a PWM-driven AC sine wave.

• Synchronization circuit ensures phase-matching with the AC grid.

Control Logic

• The microcontroller generates PWM signals for sine wave modulation.

• It also monitors voltage and current flow to ensure smooth operation.

3. Steps to Build in KiCad / EasyEDA

• Step 1: Draw the DEC as a high-capacitance storage unit.

• Step 2: Add an H-Bridge (4 MOSFETs) with a gate driver circuit.

• Step 3: Include a floating electrode (connected through a switching relay or a modulator circuit).

• Step 4: Implement a microcontroller with PWM output to control MOSFETs.

• Step 5: Add voltage and current sensors to monitor energy flow.

• Step 6: Design the AC output stage (filter + transformer for voltage scaling).

Would you like me to generate a PCB layout guide, or do you prefer a step-by-step LTSpice simulation setup?

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