TIDUEM7A April 2019 – February 2021
The nominal voltage from the mains is from 100 V–240 V so it needs to be scaled down to be sensed by an ADC. Figure 2-4 shows the analog front end used for this voltage scaling. J22 is where the voltage is applied.
In the analog front end for voltage, there consists a spike protection varistor (R34), footprints for electromagnetic interference filter beads (resistor footprints R29 and R37) , a voltage divider network (R30, R31, R32, and R35), and an RC low-pass filter (R33, R36, C40, C41, and C42).
At lower currents, voltage-to-current crosstalk affects active energy accuracy much more than voltage accuracy. To maximize the accuracy at these lower currents, in this design the entire ADC range is not used for voltage channels. Since the ADCs of the ADS131M04 device are high-accuracy ADCs, using the reduced ADC range for the voltage channels in this design still provides more than enough accuracy for measuring voltage. Equation 1 shows how to calculate the range of differential voltages fed to the voltage ADC channel for a given Mains voltage and selected voltage divider resistor values.
Based on this formula and the selected resistor values in Figure 2-4, for a mains voltage of 230 V, the input signal to the voltage ADC has a voltage swing of ±246 mV (181 mVRMS). The ±246-mV voltage range is well within the ±1.2-V input voltage that can be sensed by the ADS131M04 device for the selected PGA gain value of 1 that is used for the voltage channel.