Pi-Filter for EMC
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What would be the main considerations to use Pi-filters for EMC?
Using the filter correctly and understanding its limitations
EMC or EMI (electromagnetic interference) is noted for its high frequency energy content. Applying a
The regulations dealing with EMC and EMI are largely interested in the prevention (or significant reduction) of high frequencies and the
However, to use a
As you can see, if the loading is too light, the resonance of the inductor with load-side capacitor causes significant problems.
What would be the main considerations to use Pi-filters for EMC?
How you use and load the
Inductor self-resonance
Another consideration is where the attenuating slope of the filter's response begins. The one above begins at this frequency: -
Ideally, you would want
In the examples below I've constrained the load resistance to be fixed at 20 ohms for reasons of simplicity. In other words, I don't want to overload the images with too many responses because it might confuse things.
Initially I've considered the self-resonant frequency of a practical inductor. This self-resonance is due to internal parasitic capacitance. So, if I make L1 into 47 uH and added 100 pF of parasitic capacitance, I would get this AC response: -
The parasitic (aka self) resonance of the inductor occurs at just over 2 MHz and although this is produces impressive attenuation (a big "notch") there is a down-side.
With L1 at 47 uH and C2 at 100 nF, the point where
What would be the main considerations to use Pi-filters for EMC?
Inductor self-resonance is certainly a consideration
Capacitor self-resonance
There is also self-resonance for capacitor C2 to consider. Capacitors are usually at least an order of magnitude better than inductors for filter applications but, they are still prone to problems and can resonate with leakage inductance significantly: -
Hopefully you can see that just a few nano henries of self inductance for C2 makes a big potential problem around 20 MHz or 30 MHz and, above 100 MHz we might as well not have this
What would be the main considerations to use Pi-filters for EMC?
Capacitor self-resonance is certainly a consideration
In other words, we can only go so far with the physical realities of a single
First let's define what a "Pi filter" is:
The name comes from the inductor and two caps forming the shape of the Greek letter Π.
These filters are used for EMC compliance because they attenuate high frequencies. At minimum there is a L-C filter, which attenuates by 12 dB/octave above the rolloff frequency.
The special point of a Pi filter is that they work both ways. The power line would typically be on one side, and a device that consumes power on the other. For EMC compliance, the high frequencies caused by the device are attenuated before getting dumped onto the power line. In the other direction, it protect the device from nasty high frequencies that might be on the power line for whatever reason.
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