A sensor typically requires only a few watts to operate at low voltage, down-converted from the main system rail using a DC/DC converter. The system rail nominal is often 110VDC but can be as low as 24V. Power requirements may be higher in multi-channel sensor arrangements or when actuators must be driven, sometimes up to 40W.
Individual isolated DC/DC converters are normally employed for each sensor to maintain low output voltage drops and avoid ground loops that could cause EMC issues such as sensor cross-interference. The system supply rail is not ‘clean’. Standard EN 50155-2017 allows a variation of +25%/-30% in normal operation, with dips to 60% and surges to 140% of nominal for 100ms with no ‘deviation of function’ allowed, and 125% to 140% of nominal for one second with performance degradation. To cover these variations, DC/DC converters for 110V systems must typically operate from 43 to 160VDC.
Fast transient overvoltages are also present on the system rail as defined in the EN 61000-4-x series of standards; suppressors and simple LC filters can attenuate these. Complete loss of supply can also occur; EN 50155 defines interruptions in two classes, S1 and S2, with the worst being a 10ms loss of supply from nominal input with no performance degradation. For some equipment, the interruption can be 30ms on supply change-over (Class C2). To cover this, hold-up capacitance external to the converter is normally added after a series isolating diode, which can also provide reverse polarity protection – another requirement of the standard.
An example application is shown in Figure 1 where a fan is activated by a carriage temperature sensor, with temperature and status signalled via a WLAN connection. A RECOM 8W DC/DC converter is used with an input range of 43 to 160V, providing a regulated, isolated 5V power rail for the sensor circuitry. The DC/DC is very compact at just 32 x 20 x 10mm. Extended hold-up and reverse polarity protection are included, along with an optional EMI filter for high immunity to transients and low conducted emissions, although the RECOM DC/DC already meets high compliance levels with rolling stock EMC standard EN50121-3-2.