Hi All,
In my wireless energy experiments ..
I have come up with a Tesla coil primary semiconductor driver that provides a uni-directional pulse that has a dv/dt of 10,000V/us .. this has enabled some unusual effects. (What I am trying to do, with the most modern semiconductors, is emulate as much as I can the humble spark gap.)
The driver produces the above fast uni-directional pulse which results in the primary seeing a 100v change in just 10ns. With a 50v DC supply to the driver I am seeing 200V peak-peak sort-of-sinewave on the primary, which is purely reactive at 8 ohms. (voltage and current 90deg out of phase)
The attached photos show the waveform across the primary (2 turns), note the negative fast transient ..
The effect I am seeing is a 240v 30W incandescent bulb being lit to nearly full power just by placing it in series with the top-load of the receiving coil ..
(Lighting up Fluro's a couple of meters away was a piece of cake, but it wasn't till I got this fast pulse happening, that I could light up an incandescent bulb)
I have also attached a photo of the receive setup
Is what I am seeing unusual?
PS: The input power is is just 50W (However, peak power into the pulse, is several KW)
PPS: The addition of the light bulb makes no difference to the power drawn by the transmitter ..
Also, have a look at the interesting purple light pulsing out of the bulb ..
In my wireless energy experiments ..
I have come up with a Tesla coil primary semiconductor driver that provides a uni-directional pulse that has a dv/dt of 10,000V/us .. this has enabled some unusual effects. (What I am trying to do, with the most modern semiconductors, is emulate as much as I can the humble spark gap.)
The driver produces the above fast uni-directional pulse which results in the primary seeing a 100v change in just 10ns. With a 50v DC supply to the driver I am seeing 200V peak-peak sort-of-sinewave on the primary, which is purely reactive at 8 ohms. (voltage and current 90deg out of phase)
The attached photos show the waveform across the primary (2 turns), note the negative fast transient ..
The effect I am seeing is a 240v 30W incandescent bulb being lit to nearly full power just by placing it in series with the top-load of the receiving coil ..
(Lighting up Fluro's a couple of meters away was a piece of cake, but it wasn't till I got this fast pulse happening, that I could light up an incandescent bulb)
I have also attached a photo of the receive setup
Is what I am seeing unusual?
PS: The input power is is just 50W (However, peak power into the pulse, is several KW)
PPS: The addition of the light bulb makes no difference to the power drawn by the transmitter ..
Also, have a look at the interesting purple light pulsing out of the bulb ..
Comment