KhepeleSibilo
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« Reply #1 on: June 18, 2006, 05:14:56 17:14 » |
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**************** Ultrasonic Cleaner Schematic ****************
Ultrasonic cleaning is a means of removing dirt and surface contamination from intricate and/or delicate parts using powerful high frequency sound waves in a liquid (water/detergent/solvent) bath.
An ultrasonic cleaner contains a power oscillator driving a large piezoelectric transducer under the cleaning tank. Depending on capacity, these can be quite massive.
A typical circuit is shown below. This is from a Branson Model 41-4000 which is typical of a small consumer grade unit.
R1 D1 H o------/\/\-------|>|----------+ 1, 1/2 W EDA456 | C1 D2 | +----||----+----|>|-----+ | .1 uF | EDA456 | 2 | 200 V | +-----+---+ T1 +---+------->>------+ | R2 | _|_ C2 )|| o 4 | | | +---/\/\---+ --- .8 uF D )|| +----+ | | | 22K _|_ 200 V )||( + | | 1 W - 1 o )||( )|| _|_ +-----------------+---------+ ||( O )|| L1 _x_ PT1 | R3 | 7 ||( )|| | | +---/\/\---+ +-----+ ||( 5 + | C \| | 10K, 1 W | F )|| +---+ | | Q1 |--+-+--------------+ 6 o )|| | | | E /| | D3 R4 +---+ +----+------->>------+ | +--|<|---/\/\--+ _|_ | 47, 1 W | --- Input: 115 VAC, 50/60 Hz | | | Output: 460 VAC, pulsed 80 KHz N o------+-------------------+---+
The power transistor (Q1) and its associated components form an self excited driver for the piezo-transducer (PT1). I do not have specs on Q1 but based on the circuit, it probably has a Vceo rating of at least 500 V and power rating of at least 50 W.
Two windings on the transformer (T1, which is wound on a toroidal ferrite core) provide drive (D) and feedback (F) respectively. L1 along with the inherent capacitance of PT1 tunes the output circuit for maximum amplitude.
The output of this (and similar units) are bursts of high frequency (10s to 100s of KHz) acoustic waves at a 60 Hz repetition rate. The characteristic sound these ultrasonic cleaners make during operation is due to the effects of the bursts occuring at 60 Hz since you cannot actually hear the ultrasonic frequencies they use.
The frequency of the ultrasound is approximately 80 KHz for this unit with a maximum amplitude of about 460 VAC RMS (1,300 V p-p) for a 115 VAC input.
WARNING: Do not run the device with an empty tank since it expects to have a proper load. Do not touch the bottom of the tank and avoid putting your paws into the cleaning solution while the power is on. I don't know what, if any, long term effects there may be but it isn't worth taking chances. The effects definitely feel strange.
Where the device doesn't oscillate (it appears as dead as a door-nail), first check for obvious failures such as bad connections and cracked, scorched, or obliterated parts.
To get inside probably requires removing the bottom cover (after pulling the plug and disposing of the cleaning solution!).
CAUTION: Confirm that all large capacitors are discharged before touching anything inside!
The semiconductors (Q1, D1, D2, D3) can be tested for shorts with a multimeter (see the document: "Basic Testing of Semiconductor Devices".
The transformer (T1) or inductor (L1) could have internal short circuits preventing proper operation and/or blowing other parts due to excessive load but this isn't kind of failure likely as you might think. However, where all the other parts test good but the cleaning action appears weak without any overheating, a L1 could be defective (open or other bad connections) detuning the output circuit.
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