I am designing a single phase MIL-STD-461 AC/DC PSU. I have the following requirements to the PSU:
- It needs to operate with an input voltage from 100Vrms up to 310Vrms.
- Operating frequency 45-65 Hz
- Current rating of at least 3 Arms (important for choosing inductors and CM choke)
- Compliant to MIL-STD-461G conducted emissions
I have chosen a PFC AC/DC module that works as intended. However, the accompanying filter is only rated up to 264Vrms (the PFC AC/DC module has sufficient rating). The filter rating is mainly due to the use of X2 X7R safety capacitors in the filter. The fundamental circuit diagram of the filter is shown in this schematic from the filter datasheet (component values not specified and damping resistors not included).
The CM and DM attenuation performance of the filter with 50 Ohm source and load impedance is shown in this plot:
It seems that most commercial and military filters are rated up to 250-264Vrms, and commercial filters also have unspecified attenuation for frequencies under 150 kHz. This is why I am looking into designing my own filter, where I plan to use class 1 safety rated capacitors in order to increase the voltage rating. I think that I have two options for specifying the needed attenuation of the filter.
- Measure the spectrum of the PSU without any filter and see at which frequencies and how much I am over the limit.
- Specifying the same attenuation as in the plot shown above (given that the manufacturer of the PSU has tested the PSU/filter combination against the standard).
I would prefer option 1, but unfortunately I am unable to measure the spectrum of the PSU at this point in time, because our LISN filters and analyzer is out for calibration.
Even if I was able to measure the spectrum of the PSU, the question remains the same: "How do I design an EMI filter that meets a specified attention performance"?
I am not aware of an analytical approach to multi-stage filter design, and from the differential-mode attenuation plot, I can identify three different cut-off frequencies.
I would think that the design of EMI filters to meet a specified attentuation would be something that was "standardized" to some degree, given that almost all electronic products require a filter, but during my research I haven't been able to find this approach.
So, to summarize, these are my main questions:
- Given the required attenuation for a given frequency band, how should I design the EMI filter?
- How to choose topology?
- How to choose component values?
- Are there any SW packages available for filter synthesis and/or simulation to aid the design? (I am comfortable with spice simulation, but without a methodical way to choose topology and component values this becomes hit and miss).