Saturable reactors provide a very simple means to remotely and proportionally control the AC through a load such as an incandescent lamp; the AC current is roughly proportional to the direct current (DC) through the control winding.
The power windings, the control winding, and the core are arranged so that the control winding is well isolated from the AC power. The AC power windings are also usually configured so that they self-cancel any AC voltage that might otherwise be induced in the control winding.
Because the required inductance to achieve dimming varies with the size of the load, saturable reactors often have multiple taps, allowing a small inductance to be used with a large load or a larger inductance to be used with a smaller load. In this way, the required magnitude of the control current can be kept roughly constant, no matter what the load.
Obsolete technology
Saturable reactors designed for mains (power-line) frequency are larger, heavier, and more expensive than electronic power controllers developed after the introduction of semiconductor electronic components, and have largely been replaced by thyristordimmers using triacs or SCRs.
However, as of 2015, there has been renewed interest in using these devices for control of "smart grids" with multiple current tested installations in California, as well as the United Kingdom.[2]
^Young, Marcus Aaron II, "Saturable Reactor for Power Flow Control in Electric Transmission Systems: Modeling and System Impact
Study. " PhD diss., University of Tennessee, 2015.
[1] Retrieved on Jun 19 2020.
References
Choudhury, D. Roy (2005). Modern Control Engineering. New Delhi: Prentice-Hall of India. ISBN978-81-203-2196-0.
External links
"Saturable-core reactor". Electrical engineering training series. tpub.com. Neets module 08 – Introduction to Amplifiers. 14180.
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