Two-signal common mode spike suppression for scope
John Duffy wrote 2 天前 • 0 pointsI'm working on a test setup where I've got a problem with a common mode spike. It's a high voltage (8kv!) capacitor bank discharging in about a microsecond, so just the parasitic capacitance to ground (I assume), causes enough dV/dT to disrupt measurements. I'm measuring voltage and current with a 1000:1 divider and a shunt, respectively, with coax running to an oscilloscope. Those signals are ~ a couple V once on the coax. The power supply for the bank is floating, so theoretically there should be no ground current on the coax at all, but even with a shorted input to the coax, I'm seeing a couple volt spike on the scope. I can't seem to post a schematic of the setup here, I'll see if I can in a comment. The coax/scope ground is connected to one terminal of the capacitor bank, and the divider/shunt are referenced to the same ground. A separate, 16awg ground lead made no difference, I'm guessing any wire length has too much inductance given the ~10kV/uS but I don't see a practical way to get a low-z ground between the scope and test jig (few feet, for safety given the voltages).
I've tried wrapping the coax around a ferrite core to make a CM choke and it maybe gave me a few dB, but I need like 20dB reduction to get acceptable snr.
Since there's 2 signals, would two separate CM chokes work, or would the ground current not distribute in a way to cancel? Or could I put three windings on one core (one ground going one way, two signals going the other)? Or is there a better way to do this? I don't want to build a bunch of active circuitry to do fully differential measurements or buy a couple hundred dollar probe.
ask
Discussions
Become a Hackaday.io Member
Create an account to leave a comment. Already have an account? Log In.