Aboutcleggsan Expertise All technical areas of Electronics Engineering.
Experience BSEE, MBA, Design, R&D, University Research.
Senior Life Member of IEEE. Life Fellow of AES.
Organizations IEEE, Consumer Electronics Society, Audio Engineering Society.
Broad teaching experience; work experience mostly in consumer electronics and conversion from analog to digital technologies. Pioneer in digital audio at all levels.
1.Most of the UPS use this thirystor bridge rectifier that hac something we call firing pulse.What is firing pulse.Why cant we use normal diode rectifier?
2.Could you describe about static switch int he inverter/UPS.They have two sets of antiparallel diode.How they operates and change the mode from inverter mode to static switch bypass mode?
Answer You did not send me the make and model you are talking about. Not all ups circuits are the same. There are many ways to accomplish the same thing.
1. But, generally, the reason for using a controlled voltage power supply is to keep from overcharging AND to switch it to full charge when the cells have been discharged after a power falure or interruption. The voltage condition of the battery pack in the ups is monitored and when the unit is fully charged it sends information back to the charging circuit to reduce the current and voltage level to standby. It can be done by firing a thyristor or any type of controlled current device. SCRs and UJTs are used, also.
2. To answer this I must see the schematic that you are talking about. But, again, in general the static mode is when the cells are fully charged and it is merely idling in wait for a need to fire up and supply current during a failure. The circuit implementation that you describe is probably a voltage offset indicator to give the proper bias to the thyristor for its dc balance and firing pulse.
Cleggsan
PS: Overcharging wet cell packs is a very dangerous thing, so protections and fail safe power supply feeds must be carefully designed and tested for their operation.