Monday, 11 August 2014

What exactly happens to the signals hitting a common mode choke?


I'm trying to better understand the principles behind the common mode choke. I made a few drawings to clarify.



 
Differential Mode Signals


Differential currents (driven by differential voltages) create equal but opposite magnetic fields B in the inductor core:


enter image description here


These magnetic fields cancel each other out, so the net flux in the core is zero. As such, these differential currents don't "feel" any impedance.


 
Common Mode Signals


In contrast, common mode currents generate equal and additive magnetic fields in the core. That's why they "feel" a high impedance, and cannot get through (or getting through means they are highly attenuated).


enter image description here


But what exactly happens? I have several theories, which I will describe below.



 
Common Mode Signals - Theory 1


My first thought would be that the common mode signal hits the choke and creates a magnetic flux inside. By doing this, lots of energy is lost (hysteresis and perhaps other effects) as heat. Only a small part gets through:


enter image description here


enter image description here


What kind of common mode choke would behave in this particular way? "Burning up" the voltage spike seems a very desirable effect to me.


 
Common Mode Signals - Theory 2


Perhaps the voltage spike doesn't really get the chance to build up much magnetic flux in the core, or maybe the core is simply not "lossy" enough. The voltage spike bounces off the core and turns back. Only small part gets through:


enter image description here



Although the system on the right side of the choke is protected, the system on the left has to deal with reflected signals. Nasty things like standing waves might appear.


 
My questions


I've got a few questions for you:




  1. Do you think theory 1 or theory 2 is most plausible?




  2. Do you think certain types of common mode chokes tend to behave as described in theory 1, others like in theory 2?





  3. Perhaps both of my theories are just plain wrong. If so, what actually does happen?




Please enlighten me.



Answer



Adding to Andy's answer, no need to repeat what he wrote.


From what you write, I think your problem is more about intuitively understanding how the choke works. Consider an inductor:


enter image description here



This inductor only has one wire. Current flowing through creates a magnetic flux which is picked up by the coil itself and creates a voltage which opposes the change of current. I suppose you know about that.


Now, split the wire lengthwise. You now have the same inductor, but with two wires wound in the same direction:


enter image description here


Common mode current flows through these wires in the same direction. Thus, it does not matter if you have one wire carrying current I, or two wires each carrying I/2.


(If both wires are connected like on Andy's first picture, then the result is the same as having one wire).



My first thought would be that the common mode signal hits the choke and creates a magnetic flux inside. By doing this, lots of energy is lost (hysteresis and perhaps other effects) as heat. Only a small part gets through



So, this is not how it works. It is simply an inductor which does not act on differential signals, only on common mode ones. It adds common mode impedance due to its inductance.


But how does it remove noise?



Simple. It's an inductor, so it will impede the flow of high-frequency common mode current, simply by adding impedance.


enter image description here


Here, the two AC sources "Vhc1" and "Vhc2" have the same value, so they add common mode voltage noise to "LINE1" and "LINE2".


This noise voltage will result in a current through the choke, then the equipment on the right, and this current will either return through an explicit ground (if both pieces of gear are grounded) or through whatever means it can find (parasitic capacitance through the air, or other cables connected to other equipment).


HF common mode current flowing through cables turns them into antennas, which is a bad idea.


The choke adds impedance on the circuit, thus reducing the current. Simple as that.


enter image description here


In the above pic, the choke on the left adds common mode impedance to the line, and the caps short the remaining common mode noise to earth. This is basically a voltage divider, or a LC lowpass filter, except it handles two wires instead of one.


Think "voltage divider". The choke increases the impedance of the noise source, which allows the caps to have a better filtering effect.


The way the wires are wound can have various effects. For best common mode filtering, twist the wires together (or coil a whole cable around the magnetic core). The chokes you show have some distance between the two wires, so common mode filtering efficiency will be a bit less. However, insulation between the two wires is much better, and this winding also adds differential mode inductance in each wire, which makes the component perform two roles.



More than two wires can be used. In fact, you can thread a whole cable through a ferrite core (look for a USB cable with one of these on your computer):


enter image description here


The graph tells you the impedance added to your cable in common mode.


Also, ferrite chokes are lossy. This means the material is designed to be a rather crappy transformer, with low efficiency at high frequency. It has high hysteresis. This means it turns HF magnetic fields into heat. So above a certain frequency, the inductor stops being inductive, and behaves more like a resistor.


If you put the choke on a cable, the fact it is lossy is very useful, as it kills the resonances which might otherwise turn the cable into an efficient antenna.


EDIT


Check the impedance of a ferrite bead. This one isn't a common mode choke, but the interesting properties are in the ferrite material itself. If it was bifilar wound, the common mode impedance would have the same characteristics.


enter image description here


(source)


The portion marked "X" is inductive impedance. And the portion marked "R" is resistance. This part would suck as an inductor, it would have very low Q, lots of losses, no way to make a tuned LC tank circuit with that. However the losses are great stuff when you want to turn HF noise into heat.



There are lots of different ferrite materials, some are optimized for low losses and make good quality inductors, others are optimized for high losses at certain frequencies.


If it's specified as "EMI suppression" or "ferrite bead" or "choke" and not as an inductor, you'll get lossy materials. Then you have to check the impedance curve to make sure they'll filter the frequencies you want.


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