DocumentCode
1039787
Title
MTRAC: Computer program for transient analysis of circuits including magnetic cores
Author
Nitzan, David
Author_Institution
Standard Research Institute, Menlo Park, CA, USA
Volume
5
Issue
3
fYear
1969
fDate
9/1/1969 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
524
Lastpage
533
Abstract
A square-loop magnetic core model,
, has been incorporated into the automated circuit-analysis computer-program TRAC. The modified program, named MTRAC, includes supplementary provisions for successive modes of operation, nonlinear resistor and inductor models, normal and circuit-failure run termination, monitor printout for debugging, etc. Based on linearization of nonlinear circuit elements and Kirchoff\´s current law, the computation involves an iterative solution of
, where
] is the nodal-voltage matrix and
] and [
] are known current and conductance matrices of the circuit. Expressions are derived for the contributions to the [
] and
] matrices of various linear and nonlinear circuit elements, including magnetic cores. The input core parameters are based on either
or
data. The organization of MTRAC and that of a circuit-element subroutine are outlined. Time variables (voltages, currents, MMFs, fluxes, etc.) of complex magnetic-core circuits (up to 60 nodes) are computed and plotted automatically. All that the user has to supply is the general run-control specifications, the circuit topology, and the values of the circuit-element parameters. An example is given for a core-diode shift register.
, has been incorporated into the automated circuit-analysis computer-program TRAC. The modified program, named MTRAC, includes supplementary provisions for successive modes of operation, nonlinear resistor and inductor models, normal and circuit-failure run termination, monitor printout for debugging, etc. Based on linearization of nonlinear circuit elements and Kirchoff\´s current law, the computation involves an iterative solution of
, where
] is the nodal-voltage matrix and
] and [
] are known current and conductance matrices of the circuit. Expressions are derived for the contributions to the [
] and
] matrices of various linear and nonlinear circuit elements, including magnetic cores. The input core parameters are based on either
or
data. The organization of MTRAC and that of a circuit-element subroutine are outlined. Time variables (voltages, currents, MMFs, fluxes, etc.) of complex magnetic-core circuits (up to 60 nodes) are computed and plotted automatically. All that the user has to supply is the general run-control specifications, the circuit topology, and the values of the circuit-element parameters. An example is given for a core-diode shift register.Keywords
Computer-aided analysis; Magnetic circuits; Nonlinear networks; Algorithms; Circuit analysis computing; Computerized monitoring; Debugging; Inductors; Magnetic circuits; Magnetic cores; Nonlinear circuits; Resistors; Transient analysis;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9464
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMAG.1969.1066475
Filename
1066475
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