Direction detection of alternating current
Every house with a PV system that draws electrical energy from the grid and can feed surplus energy back into the grid must be able to reliably distinguish between these two operating states. How does this work with alternating current? This short article explains this with the help of a simple transformer circuit that can be replicated without much effort.
But how does this work with alternating current? After all, mains electricity changes direction 100 times per second at 50 Hz. Could the phase relationship between current and voltage be the solution?
To simulate this on a small scale, I built a relatively simple circuit. It consists of a transformer with two symmetrical secondary coils with the same output voltage. The coils should be separate and connectable.
Measurements taken at the low voltages of the transformer avoid the risk associated with measurements taken at 230V mains voltage.
Other components include a current transformer coil and a load resistor R1, which can be switched using switch S1. A dual-beam oscilloscope and a universal measuring device are used to measure phase angle and AC voltages. The current transformer coil also requires a terminating resistor R2.
Figure 1: Test circuit
Measurements
The voltage of the interconnected transformer windings Sec. 1 and 2 is applied to TP1 as a reference signal. It is displayed on the red channel of the oscilloscope.
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Results
It is important to align the current transformer correctly when mounting it on the wire that passes through the ring opening. Current transformers used in a measuring system to measure surplus energy from a PV system therefore have an arrow printed on them that points in the direction of the ‘household grid’.
To measure the current flowing through the current transformer, an analogue amplifier is first connected downstream, which can be calibrated according to the expected current. Further processing is usually digital, as is the detection of the phase relationship.
Figure 5

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