C. Labarre et al., PRINTED-CIRCUIT BOARD (PCB) MODEL USING THE THIN-WIRE METHOD TO COMPUTE CONDUCTED EMI IN POWER ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS, EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL-APPLIED PHYSICS, 3(2), 1998, pp. 169-181
This paper describes a method for modelling the printed conductors emp
loyed in high-frequency (range 10 kHz-1 MHz); medium-power (several kW
) static converters, in order to simulate their conducted interference
emissions. The principle of this method is to divide the circuit's la
yout into elementary rectangles. These rectangles are then substituted
by a bundle of thin cylindrical wires. Afterwards, it becomes possibl
e to determine an electrical equivalent circuit for each bundle, which
integrates inductive, capacitive and resistive effects. In the first
section of this paper, the theoretical development, with respect to a
single rectangular conductor, is presented. The printed conductor and
the thin-wire bundle equivalence conditions are then specified in the
second section; and the validity of this principle is experimentally v
erified. The third section is devoted to modelling the coupling phenom
ena between two printed conductors. Special attention has been paid to
separating strong and negligible couplings, in order both to reduce t
he computing time and to extract equivalent circuits for a complex lay
out. Quantitative coupling criteria, based on geometrical and current
quantities, are proposed; they establish the complexity of the equival
ent circuits and thereby the simulation time. The paper's final sectio
n focuses on the experimental aspects of this research work. A chopper
has been developed on a PCB. Experimental and theoretical results are
also compared: the impedance curves of the entire circuit and the con
ducted emission spectrum of the converter are presented and discussed.
The role played by the PCB in the conducted EMI is clearly revealed a
nd allows the designer to optimise the printed circuit pattern.