The CWT has been supplied to major electrical engineering companies and leading research institutions around the world for the past 20 years. This versatile instrument has been used for a wide variety of applications, some examples include:
Semiconductor Switching Waveforms
The CWT can be used for a wide variety of electronic measurements such as switching loss in power semiconductors or checking in-circuit inductance is not over stressing an IGBT or MOSFET.
The CWT is non-intrusive injecting only a few pH into the primary circuit, wide-bandwidth greater than 10MHz, has a predictable known measurement delay, and is thin and clip-around making it easy to insert into even difficult to reach parts of the circuit.
The new CWT MiniHF features an innovative screened coil making it the perfect choice for measurements on SiC devices which have faster rise times and larger blocking voltages.
Large AC Currents in Generators, Motor Drives and Power Supplies
Unlike other forms of current measurement the size of the sense coil (the Rogowski coil) is independent of the size of the measured current. Thus for large currents the size of the Rogowski coil can be chosen to suit the conductor diameter and transducer does not require an expensive and bulky magnetic former. Over a 1000A range there really is no better alternative to the Rogowski coil.
Pulsed Power Applications
PEM’s CWT Rogowski coils have been used:
- to monitor current in the kicker magnets in a large particle accelerator.
- in laser power supplies
- in a ‘Superconducting Fault Current Limiter’ (Cryogenic Application)
Measuring Small AC Currents in the Presence of Large DC Currents (e.g. capacitor ripple)
Rogowski current transducers do not measure the DC component of a current. However unlike a CT or hall effect device they contain no magnetic materials so are unaffected by the DC current. Therefore it is possible to use a small, flexible, Rogowski coil to measure a small AC current in the presence of a large DC current whereas a sensor based on a magnetic principle would be expensive and bulky to prevent saturation effects. One such common application is measuring the ripple current in capacitors where the main current is DC or slow time varying.
Other applications include:
- Power converter development and diagnostics
- High frequency Sinusoidal applications – such as Induction Heating
- rf currents