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A BiTT OF EXPLANATION The principle in a nutshell

Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

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Page 1: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

A BiTT OF EXPLANATION

The principle in a nutshell

Page 2: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

Prim

Coil

Sec 2

Coil

Sec 1

coil

P-S1 P-S2

AC

no load no load

NO LOAD (1):

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2

Core

Page 3: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

NO LOAD (2):

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Primary CoreSmall volume

Near saturation

High flux reluctance

Uses large part of the B-H curve

H

B

Used

B-H area

Iprim

Tim

e

1

1

2

2

Page 4: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

P-S1 P-S2

AC

On

load

On

load

S1-P

S1-S2

S2-S1

S2-P

Prim

Coil

R R

ON LOAD (1)

Sec 1

coil

Sec 2

Coil

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4

Core

Page 5: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

ON LOAD (2)

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Secondary CoresBig volume

No saturation:

Low flux reluctance

Uses only small part of the B-H curve

H

B

Used

B-H area

Isec

Tim

e

1

1

2

2

Page 6: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

FLUX

Initial primary flux P-S2 and P-S1 create near saturation,

making the primary core a high reluctance core part

Counter flux P-xx caused by the load resistors at secondary

coils are created in non-saturated core parts and have low

reluctance

The secondary fluxes can choose between a high reluctance path or

a low reluctance path.

Most of the secondary flux will travel the low reluctance path, through the

secondary cores

Remaining secondary flux will travel through the high reluctance path, through

the primary core

Flux flow can be compared with current in a parallel resistor circuit:

V represents the secondary flux source

10 Ω represents the secondary cores as seen by the primary,

causes large flux flow

10 kΩ represents the primary core as seen by the secondary,

causes small flux flow

10

Ω

10

V

I1 I2+

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Page 7: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

COIL FLUX COUPLE COEFFICIENTS

The BiTT employs Mutual and Non-Mutual Coupling Coefficients in symmetric and non symmetric ways Mutual coupling:

Primary to Secondary 1* (≈0.5)

Primary to Secondary 2* (≈0.5)

Secondary 1 to secondary 2 (≈1)

Secondary 2 to secondary 1 (≈1)

Non-mutual coupling:

Secondary 1 to Primary (≈0)

Secondary 2 to Primary (≈0)

* Note : The Coupling Coefficient is actually 1 but each Secondary only gets

1/2 the Primary Flux which is akin to saying a CC of 0.5 when in fact it is actually a CC of 1.

Prim

Coil

Se

c 2

Co

il

Se

c 1

co

il

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Core

Page 8: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

Primary saturation area

Primary saturation area

FLUX TUNING

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In the BiTT, ideally,

secondary flux is 0 degrees

in phase with the primary flux.

This will block the flux in a

maximized way from the

secondary coils by

optimizing saturation of

the primary coil.

time

I

Prim

Sec

BiTT primary flux result

Secondary flux phase of a

common transformer

Common transformer

primary flux result

As a reference, the secondary

flux of a common transformer

will be ≈180 degrees out of

phase with the primary flux.

This leads to decrease of the

primary core saturation and

decreases the impedance as

seen by the power source at

the primary coil.

Page 9: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

POWER FACTOR

On no load

BiTT ‘borrows’* mostly reactive power, PF0 ≈ 0

On load

The BiTT primary coil ‘borrows’* mostly reactive power,

PFL ≈ PF0- CL

May slightly differ due to flux flow from secondary to primary coils,

causing a slight decrease of PF with an estimated correction

CL (0 <CL < 0.1)

* Borrows means power is returned to primary power source

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Page 10: Philips BITT Basic Principle v4

Rob Woudenberg

CONSUMED AND DELIVERED POWER

Consumed and returned power Consumed power is equal to the real power consumed: Veff x Ieff x cos(*)

Returned power is equal to the reactive power : Veff x Ieff x sin(*)

Mainly determined by the impedance of the primary coil

Bad couple factor (CC > 0) between secondary and primary coils may add extra consumed real power

Delivered power Driven by flux generated by primary coil

In theory infinitive, but in practice limited by load value and internal coil resistance of secondary coils

* Note: is angle between voltage and current

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