I built a DCM Flyback transformer to turn a 120VAC input into a 12V output in power electronics class. Idealy I should have done a 1:1 or 1:2 transformer to create the emulated resistor, and steped it down with a buck to the necessary voltage level. as it stood, my professor is a dipshit and mislead us in the design of it so we used a very poorly made 1:4 DCM Flyback Transformer, and it was quite lossy (Lots of snubber explosions).
We eventually closed the loop, so that the input voltage and load could change and it would still stay at 12V (using a fairly slow 10 Hz compensator to filter out the 120 Hz Harmonics + a 10mF Cap on the output for low ripple). However I read on wikipedia that Active PFC does not contain inductors and capacitors? This is very confusing and I cannot figure out for the life of me what it is.
A properly designed 2 stage DCM Flyback(1:1 AC->DC) -> Buck(DC Stepdown) with a well designed compensator should create 12, 5 or 3.3 V with very low loss and an emulated resistor accross the input if I am correct. This would effectively allow for "dirty power" from the wall to be compensated for and leave you with a 12,5,3.3 etc V output no matter what your input is. Also it has low harmonic distortion due to the DCM Flyback's emulated resistor quality. This seems like the definition of Active PFC, as it compensates input and load changes for a steady output, but from what I can tell is simply passive PFC?
So basically what is Active PFC if it doesnt use caps/inductors?
We eventually closed the loop, so that the input voltage and load could change and it would still stay at 12V (using a fairly slow 10 Hz compensator to filter out the 120 Hz Harmonics + a 10mF Cap on the output for low ripple). However I read on wikipedia that Active PFC does not contain inductors and capacitors? This is very confusing and I cannot figure out for the life of me what it is.
A properly designed 2 stage DCM Flyback(1:1 AC->DC) -> Buck(DC Stepdown) with a well designed compensator should create 12, 5 or 3.3 V with very low loss and an emulated resistor accross the input if I am correct. This would effectively allow for "dirty power" from the wall to be compensated for and leave you with a 12,5,3.3 etc V output no matter what your input is. Also it has low harmonic distortion due to the DCM Flyback's emulated resistor quality. This seems like the definition of Active PFC, as it compensates input and load changes for a steady output, but from what I can tell is simply passive PFC?
So basically what is Active PFC if it doesnt use caps/inductors?
