View detail for Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection

APPLICATION NOTE
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with
Tamper Detection
Atmel AVR 8-bit Microcontroller
Features
•
•
•
Cost-effective and flexible single-phase Energy Meter
•
•
•
•
•
•
Design easily downgrades to fit normal single-phase Energy Metering
Fulfills IEC 61036 accuracy requirements for Class 1 Meters
Detects, signals and continues to measure accurately under at least 20 different
tamper conditions
Compact design with internal Flash memory, SRAM and EEPROM
Includes USART and programmable I/O
LCD is easily added by migrating to other Atmel® AVR® Microcontrollers
Secure and reprogrammable Flash memory enables flexible firmware updates
One-time, quick, and accurate digital calibration gives added benefits
• Calibration can be automated
• No need for trimming components
• No need for external EEPROM, as calibration coefficients are stored internally
•
•
Adjustable energy pulse output goes beyond 10.000 impulses / kWh
•
•
Design easily migrates to any other AVR Microcontroller
Active power, voltage and current measurements are easily accessible over
USART interface
Low-power AVR Microcontroller allows operation down to 1.8V
Introduction
This application note describes a single-phase power/energy meter with tamper logic.
The design measures active power, voltage, and current in a single-phase distribution
environment. It differs from ordinary single-phase meters in that it uses two current
transducers to measure active power in both live and neutral wires. This enables the
meter to detect, signal, and continue to measure reliably even when subject to
external attempts of tampering.
The heart of the meter is an AVR microcontroller. All measurements are carried out in
the digital domain and measurement results are available in the form of frequencymodulated pulse outputs and as plain-text values, accessible over the USART
interface. This enables the design to be used in cost-effective applications based on
mechanical display counters. Alternatively, the design easily fits more computerized
applications with features such as remote reading (AMR), demand recording, multiple
tariffs, and other.
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A prototype built for 230V and 10A operation showed better than 1% accuracy over a
dynamic range of 500:1. With careful PCB design and following the guidelines given
at the end of this document the accuracy can be further increased. The meter is
easily configured to fit any other voltage and current settings.
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Table of Contents
1. Overview .............................................................................................. 5 2. Meter Hardware ................................................................................... 6 2.1 Warning: Shock Hazard .................................................................................... 6 2.2 Power Supply .................................................................................................... 6 2.2.1 Power Budget ..................................................................................... 6 2.2.2 Theory …............................................................................................ 7 2.2.3 Source of Noise .................................................................................. 7 2.2.4 Component Values ............................................................................. 7 2.3 Analog Front End .............................................................................................. 8 2.3.1 Voltage Front End ............................................................................... 9 2.3.1.2 Crosstalk ........................................................................... 9 2.3.2 Current Front End ............................................................................. 10 2.3.2.2 Calculating the Gain ........................................................ 10 2.3.2.3 Calculating Full-scale ...................................................... 11 2.3.2.4 DC Decoupling ................................................................ 11 2.3.2.5 DC Bias ........................................................................... 11 2.3.2.6 Eliminating Noise ............................................................ 12 2.3.3 Protection Circuitry ........................................................................... 12 2.4 Microcontroller Section .................................................................................... 12 2.4.1 Signal LEDs ...................................................................................... 12 2.4.2 Display Counter ................................................................................ 12 2.4.3 Programming Interface ..................................................................... 13 2.4.4 Serial Interface .................................................................................. 13 2.4.4.2 Communication Noise ..................................................... 13 2.5 Summary: Defaults.......................................................................................... 14 3. Meter Firmware .................................................................................. 14 3.1 Sampling and Timing ...................................................................................... 14 3.2 DC Offset Removal ......................................................................................... 14 3.3 Active Power Measurement ............................................................................ 15 3.4 Energy Pulse Output ....................................................................................... 15 3.4.1 Regular Mode T/C ............................................................................ 16 3.4.2 Extended Mode T/C .......................................................................... 16 3.5 Display Pulse Outputs ..................................................................................... 17 3.6 Voltage and Current Measurement ................................................................. 18 3.7 Tamper Detection............................................................................................ 18 3.7.1 Earth Fault ........................................................................................ 18 3.7.2 Reversed Current ............................................................................. 19 3.8 Calibration ....................................................................................................... 19 3.8.1 Phase ….. ......................................................................................... 20 3.8.2 Current Gain ..................................................................................... 20 3.8.2.1 Example .......................................................................... 21 3.8.3 Voltage Gain ..................................................................................... 21 3.8.4 Active Power Gain ............................................................................ 21 3.8.5 Meter Constant ................................................................................. 21 3.8.5.1 Limitations ....................................................................... 22 3.8.6 Display Constant ............................................................................... 22 3.8.7 Coefficient Layout ............................................................................. 22 3.9 Program Constants ......................................................................................... 23 3.9.1 AMP_LO ........................................................................................... 23 3.9.2 SAT_LO, SAT_HI ............................................................................. 23 3.9.3 GAIN_HOLD ..................................................................................... 23 3.9.4 I_MIN ….. ......................................................................................... 23 3.9.5 OFFSET ….. ...................................................................................... 23 3.9.6 NMAX ….. ......................................................................................... 23 3.9.7 NORM ….. ........................................................................................ 23 3.9.8 DP_ON …… ...................................................................................... 23 Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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3.10 Duty Cycle ....................................................................................................... 23 3.11 Summary: Defaults.......................................................................................... 24 4. Setting up the Meter ........................................................................... 25 4.1 Warning: Ground Precation ............................................................................. 25 4.2 Hardware Setup .............................................................................................. 25 4.2.2 Warning: Galvanic Isolation .............................................................. 26 4.2.3 Programming .................................................................................... 26 4.2.4 Calibration and Metering ................................................................... 26 4.3 Firmware Setup ............................................................................................... 26 5. Calibration Example ........................................................................... 27 5.1 Setup …… ...................................................................................................... 27 5.2 Step 1 – Initialization ....................................................................................... 27 5.3 Step 2 – Gain .................................................................................................. 27 5.4 Step 3 – Phase................................................................................................ 28 5.5 Step 4 – Final Gain ......................................................................................... 28 5.6 Step 5 – Verify................................................................................................. 29 6. Measurement Results ........................................................................ 30 6.1 Power Consumption ........................................................................................ 30 6.2 Accuracy ......................................................................................................... 30 7. Flow Charts ........................................................................................ 31 7.1 Main Program.................................................................................................. 31 7.1.2 Initialization ....................................................................................... 32 7.1.3 Character Input Service .................................................................... 33 7.1.4 Calculation Cycle Service ................................................................. 34 7.1.5 SetPulse() ......................................................................................... 36 7.2 Timer/Counter ISRs ........................................................................................ 37 7.3 ADC ISR ......................................................................................................... 39 8. Schematic .......................................................................................... 40 9. Bill-of-Material (BOM) ........................................................................ 41 10. Developing the Meter Further ............................................................ 42 10.1 Analog Front End ............................................................................................ 42 10.2 Power Supply .................................................................................................. 42 10.3 Microcontroller Section .................................................................................... 42 10.4 Meter Firmware ............................................................................................... 43 11. Revision History ................................................................................. 44 Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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1.
Overview
Power meters are sometimes referred to as energy meters and vice versa. Per definition, (active) power is a measure of
what is required (or consumed) in order to perform useful work. For example, a light bulb with a 100W rating consumes
100 watts of active power in order to create light (and heat). Energy, per definition, is the measure of how much work
has been required over a known period of time. In the light bulb example, leaving the bulb on for an hour it will consume
100W x 3600s = 360000Ws (watt-seconds) = 100Wh (watt-hours) = 0.1kWh (kilowatt-hours) of energy.
The meter described in this application note can be referred to as a power meter, an energy meter or a kilowatt-hour
meter. The Energy Pulse output (EP) is a ready indication of active power, as registered by the meter; the frequency of
the pulse is directly proportional to active power. Integrating pulses over time gives active energy. For storage
purposes, the meter includes two pulse outputs (DPP and DPN) to directly drive various display counters. All pulse
outputs are easy to configure for any reasonable rate. The default is 10.000 impulses per kilowatt-hour for the EP output
and 100 impulses per kilowatt-hour for the DPP/DPN pulses.
Not only pulse rates are readily adjusted; all measurement results can be calibrated in the digital domain, removing the
need for any trimming components. This includes adjustments to compensate for phase delays in current transformers.
The calibration event can be automated, removing the time-consuming manual trimming required in traditional,
electromechanical meters. Digital calibration is fast and efficient, reducing the overall production time and cost.
Calibration coefficients are safely stored in the internal EEPROM, further reducing the need for external devices.
The brain of the meter is the firmware, which is provided open source. Although it includes all the functionality required
for a tamper-proof, single-phase meter, it can be modified and updated at any time. Even in the field. The firmware is
entirely written in C, which makes modifications easy to implement. Integrity and intellectual property are yet easy to
secure using Lock Bits of the AVR microcontroller.
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2.
Meter Hardware
The energy meter hardware consists of a power supply, an analog front end, a microcontroller section, and an interface
section.
2.1
Warning: Shock Hazard
The meter described in this application note connects to high currents and high voltages. High currents and high
voltages may be hazardous, even lethal. Hence, the meter should be operated by qualified technicians only. Atmel
takes no responsibility for any consequence that may result from the use of this document or the application described
herein.
Figure 2-1. Electric shock hazard.
L
N
465
LOAD
There is no insulation between line voltage and the meter. Hence, sections of the meter contain high voltages and even
the low-voltage output of the power supply is connected to the mains. Use caution. The meter must be enclosed in a
non-conductive casing to avoid accidental voltage shocks.
2.2
Power Supply
The power supply is a low-efficiency, but cost-effective and compact design. It is intended to provide just the amount of
power needed by the meter at a cost as low as possible. If enhancements are made to the meter it may be necessary to
derive new values for some of the components.
2.2.1
Power Budget
Table 2-1 summarizes typical current consumption of the main parts of the meter.
Table 2-1.
Typical current consumption of main meter sections.
Section
Includes
Front End
Operational amplifiers
Microcontroller
LED
AVR (active mode, 4MHz)
(2)
All LEDs (each about 1mcd brightness)
Display
Notes:
(1)
Display counter (400Ω coil impedance)
1.
Typical consumption, according to LMV358 data sheet.
2.
According to the Atmel ATmega88 datasheet.
3.
LEDs are mostly off and display counter is updated rarely.
Continuous
Peak
0.2mA
0.2mA
1.8mA
3.5mA
None
(3)
3.0mA
None
(3)
7.5mA
Peak currents are brief, mainly occurring when the display counter is updated. The worst-case scenario is when the
display counter is updated and all LEDs are lit. Typically, the power supply needs to be able to supply less than 10mW
(at 3V), but it must also be able to deliver the brief bursts of energy required to turn the coil of the counter.
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2.2.2
Theory
The power supply is illustrated in Figure 2-2. Figure 2-2 is identical to the power supply section of the meter, as
illustrated in Chapter 8 - Schematic, but component numbers are not the same.
Well the galvanic connection between live wires and meter ground!
Figure 2-2. Low-cost, transformer-less power supply.
VCC
C1
R1
U1
D2
L
+VIN
VOUT
GND
230V
C2
D1
N
The power supply is based on halfway rectification. During negative half-waves, capacitor C1 is charged and during
positive half-waves the capacitor is drained. Zener diode D1 (minus the forward voltage of diode D2) dictates to which
voltage C2 is charged. Voltage regulator U1 uses the energy stored in C2 to produce a stable output voltage. Resistor
R1 controls the charge and discharge of C1 and also limits the current flow through Zener diode D1.
2.2.3
Source of Noise
Note:
The power supply can be a source of noise, if poorly planned and realized.
Ground connections are very important. For example, the current flow through the Zener is rather large and if the same
ground track is shared by the Zener and, say, the operational amplifiers (see current front end) then measurement
results will be greatly degraded. Typically, this can be seen as odd harmonics in the measured current signal.
It is recommended to use star topology in ground connections.
2.2.4
Component Values
The dropout voltage for the 3.3V regulator U1 is about 5V. When input voltage falls below the dropout level, the device
ceases to regulate. The regulator input must be kept above this level, even at the end of the drain cycle and at worst
case current consumption.
As a starting point, the Zener diode is specified to 15V. This leaves much headroom for capacitor C2 to discharge
before reaching minimum input voltage of the regulator.
Next, the size of capacitor C2 is calculated. The minimum size is derived based on the general discharge function of the
capacitor, as follows:
Equation 2-1. Equation to calculate size of charge capacitor.
V = V0 × e
t
− RC
⇒
C=−
t
R × ln
( )
V
V0
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Here t is the discharge time, V0 is the initial voltage, V is the voltage after discharge and R is the load discharging the
capacitor. If the worst case current consumption is 14mA (see Table 2-1), then the equivalent load resistance is R =
3V/14mA = 214Ω. Worst case current consumption takes place when driving the display counter. The length of the drive
pulse is 100ms, by default. Assuming the voltage of the charged capacitor is allowed to drop to regulator minimum
during the length of one display pulse, the smallest size of the capacitor is as follows:
Equation 2-2. Calculating minimum size of capacitor C2.
C=−
0.1s
= 425 .3μF ≈ 470 μF
5V
)
214 Ω × ln (15V
Next, capacitor C1 is calculated. The size of the capacitor should be as small as possible, since it dictates how much
power is drawn from the mains lines. Also, the larger the capacitor, the more expensive it is. The minimum size of the
capacitor is derived from the basic functions of stored charge (Q = CU) and current (I = Q/t). For capacitor C1 it is no
longer required to use the above worst-case current (14mA), since capacitor C2 will store energy enough to maintain
the current briefly. Assuming 10mA continuous current, and that the capacitor is drained over one 50Hz half cycle, and
that voltage is 80% of nominal, then the required minimum size of the capacitor is as follows:
Equation 2-3. Calculating minimum size of capacitor C1.
C=
I× t
0.01A × 0.01s
=
= 0.543 μF ≈ 680nF
U MAINS
0.8 × 230V
The capacitor needs to be fully charged each half-cycle. The charge time is dictated by resistor R1, the size of which
can be derived using the so-called 5RC rule of thumb. The 5RC rule says that for a step change in voltage the capacitor
charges to within 1% of its final value in five time constants (RC). Specifying that the capacitor should be (almost) fully
charged at the peak of the positive half-wave, the maximum size of resistor R1 can be estimated as follows:
Equation 2-4. Calculating maximum size of charge limit resistor
t = 5× R × C
⇒
R=
t
0.005s
=
= 1470 Ω
5 × C 5 × 68 0nF
Another limitation on resistor R1 is that it must be small enough for capacitor C2 to charge enough during one halfcycle. The larger R1 is the less C2 is charged each cycle. On the other hand, it is unreasonable to specify R1 such that
C2 charges to, say, 99% during one half-cycle since this would make R1 very small and the power consumption in
Zener diode D1 very large. Instead, a decent charge level is selected and R1 is specified accordingly. For example,
setting R1 = 470Ω the meter works nicely (input voltage to regulator typically stays above 13V at all times).
2.3
Analog Front End
The analog front end is the part, which interfaces to the high voltage lines. It conditions high voltages and high currents
down to a level where the signals cannot harm the more delicate electronics. It converts high voltages and high currents
to voltages sufficiently small to be measured directly by the ADC of the microcontroller.
The nominal line voltage of the meter is 230V and the maximum rated current is 10A, both of which obviously are way
too large signals to be fed directly to any microcontroller. The analog front end converts line voltage and line current to
voltages with amplitudes of no more than 1V peak-to-peak. The front end is easy to configure for any other line voltage
or current, as described in the following.
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2.3.1
Voltage Front End
Line voltage is first downsized using a resistor ladder, then DC-filtered and finally DC-biased, as illustrated in Figure 23.
Note:
Component numbers are not the same as in Figure 8-1.
Figure 2-3. Voltage front end.
230V
VCC
R1
R3
C1
R2
R4
LOAD
The resistor ladder R1-R2 by default produces a 1.1VPP signal when the line voltage reaches 115% of nominal voltage,
as follows:
Equation 2-1. Downsizing the line voltage.
U MAX = U NOM × 1.15 ×
R2
230V × 1.15 × 1kΩ
=
= 0.388V = 1.099V PP
R1 + R2
681kΩ
The nominal voltage is 230V by default and the 265V limit is there to leave 15% headroom for over-voltages.
The DC bias ladder R3-R4 positions the AC signal halfway up the ADC voltage reference. By default, it has been sized
to fit the Atmel ATmega88 (1.1V reference) and 3V supply voltage, as follows:
Equation 2-2. DC bias level of downsized signal.
U DC = U VCC ×
U
R4
3V × 680kΩ
=
= 0.55V ≈ AREF
R3 + R4
3.68M Ω
2
2.3.1.2 Crosstalk
Note:
The voltage front end handles voltages of considerable amplitude, which makes it a potential source of noise.
Disturbances are readily emitted into current measurement circuitry, where it will interfere with the actual signal to be
measured. Typically, this shows as a non-linear error at small signal amplitudes and non-unity power factors. At unity
power factor, voltage and current signals are in phase and crosstalk between voltage and current channels merely
appears as a gain error, which can be calibrated. When voltage and current are not in phase crosstalk will have a nonlinear effect on the measurements, which cannot be calibrated.
Crosstalk is minimized by means of good PCB planning and the proper use of filter components.
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2.3.2
Current Front End
The current front end is a little bit more complex than the voltage front end. This is because line voltage remains
constant at, say, 230V but line current varies with the load. Line current typically ranges from some milliamperes (mA)
to ten amperes (A), or more. In order to achieve 1% measurement accuracy over such a wide range, the ADC would
need to have a resolution of around 16 bits. Since the target device includes only a 10-bit A/D-converter the front end
must amplify small-scale signals. The current front end therefore includes a programmable gain stage, which is
controlled by the MCU.
The design criteria for the programmable gain stage are not very relaxed; the gain stage must amplify AC signals up to
around 100x, but provide little or no DC amplification. This is because the input is a DC-biased AC signal and if the gain
stage provides even a small DC amplification the output will saturate. In addition, the gain must be programmable by
the MCU and the settling time must be considerably less than a second. Finally, the design must be cost-effective.
There are many school examples of how to realize the above, but most of them are sooner or later ruled out by at least
one of the design criteria. A good starting point, however, is the operational amplifier; they are common, exist in a wide
variety and can be very cost-effective.
A little experimentation soon shows that the non-inverting amplifier is not a viable topology for this design, mostly
because of the requirements for high AC and low DC gains. Considering the frequency band of interest, AC-coupled,
non-inverting amplifiers require very large (and expensive) capacitors for the DC decoupling. Also, a large DC
decoupling capacitor leads to very long switching times when gain is altered. Since the gain needs to be variable the
DC levels cannot be trimmed to zero.
A viable solution is found from inverting amplifier topology, although it still requires a rather (but not very) large capacitor
to be used. Gain configuration resistors are readily toggled in and out using low-cost switches from 74HC-series logic,
as shown in Figure 2-4. The gain stage shown has a fast switching time and allows high AC gain but a low DC gain.
Figure 2-4. Inverting amplifier with variable gain uses bilateral switches (74HC4066).
C1
R11
R12
R13
R2
RS
VCC
I/O0
R4
C2
I/O1
R3
2.3.2.2 Calculating the Gain
The gain of the inverting amplifier is as follows:
Equation 2-3. Gain of inverting amplifier.
A=−
R2
R1
Here R1 consists of the series connection of R11, R12 and R13. Gain is adjusted by shorting out one of resistors R12
or R13. This is done using the bilateral switches, which are controlled by two I/O-pins of the MCU, shown as I/O0 and
I/O1 in Figure 2-4.
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Gain adjustment resistors are dimensioned such that each range has an amplification of about eight times the previous.
The number of switches may well be increased and the gain difference decreased, however, it is not recommended to
have a larger gain difference than eight between two subsequent ranges. This because gain differences of around ten,
and higher, cause the signal to degrade below 1% accuracy before it can be further amplified.
Table 2-2 illustrates how gain is adjusted from the MCU.
Table 2-2.
I/O0
Adjusting the gain of the inverting amplifier. R2 = 470kΩ.
I/O1
Range
R1 impedance
Gain
(2)
Low
Low
Low
R11+R12+R13 = 6.8k+39k+330k
Low
High
Medium
R11 + R12 = 6.8k+39k
-(470/45.8) = -10.26
High
R11 = 6.8k
-(470/6.8) = -69.11
High
Notes:
X
(1)
1.
No effect, when I/O0 is high.
2.
All switches open; all resistors connected in series.
-(470/375.8) = -1.25
2.3.2.3 Calculating Full-scale
Shunt resistor RS and the current transformer are scaled such that a voltage signal of no more than 1V peak-to-peak is
present at the amplifier output when maximum current flows through the primary of the current transformer and the
amplifier is set to minimum gain. For example, using a 2500:1 current transformer, a 68Ω resistor, and setting
amplification to minimum (see above), the voltage at the output is as follows:
Equation 2-4. Full-scale voltage at amplifier output.
U MAX =
A × RS × I MAX 1.25 × 68Ω × 10A RMS
=
= 0.34V RMS ≈ 0.96V PP
N
2500
2.3.2.4 DC Decoupling
The input signal of the amplifier must be DC decoupled. This is done by using capacitor C1, shown in Figure 2-4. It
should be noted that R1 + C1 form a high-pass filter (HPF) that may distort signals, especially at high gains. The corner
frequency, or the –3dB point, of the HPF is calculated as follows:
Equation 2-5. Corner frequency of HPF.
f -3dB =
1
2 × π × R1 × C1
The closer the corner frequency of the HPF is to the frequency band of the interest, the higher is the distortion of phase
and amplitude. It is recommended to keep a distance of at least 100x between the two frequencies. At 50Hz line
frequency and R1 minimum = R11 = 6.8kΩ, C1 should not be less than 47μF.
2.3.2.5 DC Bias
The output signal of the gain stage is biased around the DC level present at the non-inverting input of the operational
amplifier. Hence, this DC level should be exactly half of the reference voltage of the ADC in the MCU. Assuming a 1.1V
reference, the voltage divider R3-R4 should produce a stable 0.55V. The voltage divider should have a large impedance
to keep the current consumption low, since high impedance increases noise. For example, assuming 3V supply voltage,
a suitable set of values is 3MΩ + 560kΩ.
The DC level is stabilized with one, or many, capacitors. It is recommended to include at least one capacitor in the μFrange.
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2.3.2.6 Eliminating Noise
To make accurate measurements, the input signal must be as clean as possible, especially at low amplitudes. Input
signals with low amplitude are amplified before being sampled and processed, which means any noise in the signal will
be enlarged, too. At the low end of the measurement range input signals have amplitudes below 10mV, which means
noise typically not visible on an oscilloscope (say, below 1mV) may distort the signal by as much as 10%.
Noise is eliminated using good PCB planning and properly sized and placed filter components.
2.3.3
Protection Circuitry
Energy meters are prone to operate in harsh environments; meters are often subject to over-voltages and current
spikes. If such disturbances are not properly shielded they may traverse all the way to the MCU and drive it outside
operating limits.
There are many techniques available for filtering out unwanted disturbances. Rapid voltage spikes are usually
suppressed using varistors, which normally have very high impedance. At a given threshold the impedance very rapidly
decreases, causing a short circuit, which then leads the excess energy to ground. Varistors must be picked such that
they do not break down if the spike is too large or lasts too long (i.e. if the energy of the spike grows too large).
Much depending on the layout of the circuit board and connectors, some inputs may be prone to pick up radiated noise.
In some cases, even the circuit board tracks can perform as antennas and pick up noise from the environment. Induced
noise can be throttled using well-placed diodes, which clamp signals between ground and supply voltage.
EMC protection techniques are well covered in application note “AVR040: EMC Design Considerations”.
2.4
Microcontroller Section
The microcontroller section includes the AVR and the clock source to run it. Also included are all digital input and output
circuitry.
2.4.1
Signal LEDs
In order to keep power consumption low all LEDs are of low-current type. Low-current LEDs typically produce around
2mcd of light power for 2mA current. The LEDs have a forward voltage of about 2V and using a series resistor of 1kΩ
will therefore limit the current to about 1mA per LED. The resulting LED brightness is good for most applications.
2.4.2
Display Counter
For display purposes, this application uses what is sometimes referred to as a stepper motor counter. These types of
counters are typically available in a price competitive range and tend to be rather common in designs like this. The
counter is driven using a pulse waveform as illustrated in Figure 2-5.
Figure 2-5. Pulse waveform to drive display counter.
tDPX
DPP
2tDPX
tDPX
DPN
By default, pulse length tDPX is 100ms, but this is readily adjusted from the firmware to any other value.
Naturally, the pulse outputs provided by the design can be used to drive standard impulse counters, as well.
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2.4.3
Programming Interface
The programming interface is required for programming the microcontroller and for calibrating the meter. Using the
serial programming interface (SPI) of the AVR, it is possible to access both Flash and EEPROM via the same
connector. Complete system programming and calibration can be performed at any time.
The pin layout of the programming interface is shown in Table 2-3.
Table 2-3.
2.4.4
Pin layout of SPI connector.
Pin
Name
Direction
Description
1
MISO
Out
Serial Data Out
2
VCC
N/A
Supply Voltage
3
SCK
In
Serial Clock
4
MOSI
In
Serial Data In
5
/RST
In
Device Reset
6
GND
N/A
Ground
Serial Interface
The application uses the USART (Universal Synchronous/Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter) interface of the AVR to
send measurement data. Any terminal software can be used for sending commands to the meter and for receiving
measurement data. Measurement results, once calibrated, are given in units of watts, volts, and amperes.
Table 2-4 shows the pin layout of the asynchronous interface connector.
Table 2-4.
Note:
Pin layout of serial interface.
Pin
Name
Direction
Description
1
RxD
In
Asynchronous data in
2
TxD
Out
Asynchronous data out
3
GND
N/A
Ground
4
GND
N/A
Ground
The meter does not contain a level converter and the signals can therefore not be directly connected to the serial port of
a computer. The RS-232 spare connector on the Atmel STK®500 contains a level converter and can therefore be
used as a buffer between the meter and the computer.
2.4.4.2 Communication Noise
Asynchronous communication may introduce noise in measurement results, especially when power supply is unable to
provide the amount of current required and when ground connections have not been properly laid out. By default, the
power supply is capable of delivering enough current for the meter to run, but not necessarily enough to drive the
USART interface, since it is typically not required after calibration. In addition, the serial interface cable may deliver
disturbances to the meter.
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2.5
Summary: Defaults
As a summary, some default values for the hardware are shown in Table 2-5.
Table 2-5.
3.
Hardware defaults.
Parameter
Value
Note
System clock
4MHz
External crystal by default
Maximum current
10A
External amplifier chops above 10A
Nominal voltage
230V
Varistor chops signals above 250V
Current gain ranges
1.25 / 10 / 69
Meter Firmware
The firmware is written in C language and compiles on IAR Embedded Workbench®, versions 3.10 and later. Previous
compiler versions do not support the Atmel ATmega88 and cannot be used as such. The language syntax is standard
C, so the firmware should be easy to port to other C compilers of choice.
The firmware is interrupt-driven, which means the main program consists of an endless loop that is halted by interrupt
requests on a regular basis. It is important that the interrupt requests arrive regularly since they are used as the time
base for calculations. Variations in interrupt intervals will show in the accuracy of measurement results.
Interrupt requests are generated by the ADC, which is driven by a prescaled system clock.
3.1
Sampling and Timing
The Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) is set to operate in Free Running Mode, which means a new conversion will start
immediately after the current conversion completes. At the end of a conversion, the ADC raises an interrupt request and
the MCU starts executing the Interrupt Service Routine (ISR). The ISR reads, processes, and accumulates sampled
data and then returns execution to the main program.
The main program is mostly idle and is activated only when enough data has been accumulated for the end-of-cycle
calculations to start. Once started, the ISR may still continue to interrupt the main program, even when it is busy
calculating.
ADC interrupt requests occur at sampling rate, which is by default:
Equation 3-1. Default sample rate.
fS =
3.2
f CLK
4000000Hz
=
= 2403.85Hz
128 × 13
1664
DC Offset Removal
When the ISR is started, its first task is to read sampled data from the ADC and store it in a location in SRAM where it
cannot be overwritten by new data. The first task to perform on the data is then to remove any DC offset. This is carried
out by using a digital High-Pass Filter (HPF) of type Infinite Impulse Response (IIR). The transfer function of the filter
can be written as follows:
Equation 3-2. High-pass filter, infinite impulse response type.
y[n ] = 0.996 × y[n − 1] + 0.996 × x [n ] - 0.996 × x [n - 1]
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This is a short – and simple – digital filter, but it removes DC sufficiently well and has a reasonable settling time. For a
step change in input, the filter will settle to within 1% of its final value in some 1200 samples. This means that after
power-on the meter should be allowed a few seconds to settle before measurements start. This is not a problem when
the meter is running, as there are no large step changes in DC level.
It should be noted that the filter is realized with a bit length higher than the input or output data. If internal filter data is
truncated, the filter will rather generate offset than remove it. Hence, the filter implementation uses 32-bit data types
(signed long) for intermediate and output data.
3.3
Active Power Measurement
Active power is defined as the power used by a device to produce useful work. Mathematically it is the definite integral
of voltage, u(t), times current, i(t), as follows:
Equation 3-3. Active power definition.
T
1
P ≡ ∫ u (t ) × i(t ) dt ≡ U × I × cos (ϕ )
TO
Here U and I are the respective voltage and current Root-Mean-Square (RMS) values and phi is the phase lag between
current and voltage. The discrete time equivalent is:
Equation 3-4. Active power definition in discrete time.
N -1
P≡
1
u (n )× i(n )
N n∫=0
Here u(n) and i(n) are the sampled instances of u(t) and i(t) and N is the number of samples. Active power is calculated
simply as the average of N voltage-current products. It can be shown that this method is valid for both sinusoidal and
distorted waveforms.
The implementation uses 32-bit data types (signed long) for storing accumulated data. The result is stored as a floatingpoint number. When the meter has been calibrated, the active power results are in units of watts.
3.4
Energy Pulse Output
Most energy meters are required to provide a pulse, which frequency is proportional to the amount of active power
measured. The pulse typically drives a LED, which is used for calibration or verification purposes. The frequency of the
energy pulse, EP, and the amount of active power measured are related as follows:
Equation 3-5. Frequency of energy pulse output.
f =
P × MC
3 600 000
Here P is active power in watts and MC is the meter constant in pulses/kilowatt-hour. The meter constant is part of the
calibration coefficient set, and can be set to any integer value, ranging from one to 65535. Taking into account the
system clock, fCLK, and the timer/counter prescaler, PS, the energy pulse interval is derived as follows:
Equation 3-6. Interval of energy pulse output.
T=
f CLK × 3 600 000
PS × P × MC
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It should be noted that after the meter constant has been set there is only one variable; active power, P. In order to save
instruction cycles, the expression is reduced to T = N/P, where N is a pre-calculated, constant numerator. The
numerator is calculated during firmware initialization, when MC is read from EEPROM. The default numerator is as
follows:
Equation 3-7. Constant numerator at default meter constant.
N=
f CLK × 3 600 000 4 000 000 × 3 600 000
=
= 1 406 250
PS × MC
1024 × 10 000
After the required pulse interval has been calculated the timer/counter (T/C) is programmed to produce a pulse output
with an interval as close as possible to the one derived. The 16-bit T/C is clocked by a prescaled system clock. The
prescaler is chosen such that even the smallest pulse intervals can be accurately represented. The problem is to also
be able to accurately produce pulses with very long intervals. For this purpose, the T/C is extended with a firmware
counter.
3.4.1
Regular Mode T/C
The regular T/C mechanism is illustrated in Figure 3-1. In this mode of operation the energy pulse is set on each
compare match.
Figure 3-1. Basic timer/counter operation.
OCR1A
TCNT1
OCR1B
tEPH
tEP
OC1A
(EP)
A compare match with OCR1A sets the OC1A output and a compare match with OCR1B clears the same. The pulse
interval, tEP, is controlled by OCR1A and the pulse width, tEPH, by OCR1B.
3.4.2
Extended Mode T/C
When the calculated energy pulse interval exceeds 16 bits the firmware extended, 16-bit counter (TC1ext) is activated.
The firmware counter value is increased each time the hardware counter reaches 16-bit maximum, effectively making
the extended counter 32 bits in length. The extended counter mechanism is illustrated in Figure 3-2.
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Figure 3-2. Extended timer/counter operation.
MAX
TCNT1
TC1extREM
OCR1B
OCR1A
MAX ($FFFF)
TC1ext
0
MAX ($FFFF)
1
TC1extREM
TC1extTOP
MAX ($FFFF)
TC1extTOP+1
0
OC1A
(EP)
3.5
Display Pulse Outputs
For each energy pulse emitted, an internal pulse counter is increased. When the counter reaches a given threshold a
display pulse sequence is initiated, as shown in Figure 3-3. The threshold can be set using calibration coefficients.
Figure 3-3. Generation of display pulses.
OC1A
(EP)
Display
Counter
N-1
N
0
1
N
0
1
tDP
PD6
(DPP)
tDPX tDPX tDPX
PD7
(DPN)
Pulse width and spacing, tDPX, are firmware constants, which are easy to alter. The default setting generates 100ms
long pulses.
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3.6
Voltage and Current Measurement
The firmware calculates Root-Mean-Square (RMS) values of voltage and currents. An RMS value is defined as the
square root of the mean value of the squares of the instantaneous values of a periodically varying quantity, averaged
over one complete cycle. The discrete time equation for calculating voltage RMS is as follows:
Equation 3-8. Voltage RMS calculation in discrete time domain.
N −1
U RMS =
∑ u (n )
2
n =0
N
Current RMS is calculated using the same equation, only substituting voltage samples, u(n), for current samples, i(n).
Accumulated data is stored 32 bits wide (signed long) and the calculation result is stored as a floating-point number.
When properly calibrated, the resulting voltage measurement is in units of volts and current measurements in units of
amperes.
3.7
Tamper Detection
A tamper condition enters when meter wiring is altered in a pilfering manner, typically with the intention to reduce
electricity billing. The firmware detects, signals and continues to measure accurately under more than twenty known
tamper conditions, including reversal of current and partial or whole earth reroutings.
Tamper detection is based on monitoring current flow in both live and neutral wires. Tamper indicators are set if any
inconsistency is detected between the two currents. Actions are then taken to ensure measurement data is recorded
correctly, regardless of the type of pilfering attempt.
3.7.1
Earth Fault
An earth fault means some or all loads have been connected to another ground potential and not the neutral wire. A
partial earth fault is illustrated in Figure 3-4. Full current, ITOT, only flows through one of the current transformers, since
part of the return current, I2, does not go through the meter. As a consequence, the current in the neutral wire, I1, is less
than that in the live wire, ITOT. Alternatively, if live and neutral wires have been swapped, the current in the live wire is
less than that in the neutral.
Figure 3-4. Partial earth fault.
N
L
METER
ITOT
I1
RL1
I2
RL1
LOAD
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The firmware constantly monitors current flow in both wires, and signals an earth-fault if the magnitude difference
between the two exceeds a given threshold. The threshold has been hardwired to 5%, but is easily adjusted in the
source code.
The earth fault indicator is set during initialization and will not be cleared until at least one set of valid readings have
been found. This means that if the meter is powered on at a no-load condition the fail indicator will remain constantly
set.
The firmware always uses the larger of the two readings for driving the energy pulse and an earth fault therefore has no
effect on the accuracy.
3.7.2
Reversed Current
A reversed current condition means current in one or both wires is flowing in the wrong direction. As a consequence,
active power readings will have the wrong sign. The firmware activates the reversed current indicator when any of the
two currents has a sign opposite the one expected. Figure 3-5 illustrates how return current, I2, has been reversed while
live current, I1, flows in the expected direction.
Figure 3-5. Reversed return current.
N
L
METER
I2
I1
RL
LOAD
The reversed current indicator is set during initialization, but is soon cleared, provided currents in live and neutral wires
flow in the correct direction.
The firmware always uses the absolute value of active power for driving the energy pulse, and the direction of current
therefore has no effect on accuracy.
3.8
Calibration
No two meters are alike and individual variations are to be expected. Typical tolerance figures for components used in
the meter are 5%, which means the assembled meter has an inherent error of the same magnitude. Hence, each meter
must be calibrated before accurate measurement result can be obtained.
Rather than populating the meter with trimming resistors and rely on slow, manual calibration the procedure is readily
carried out in the digital domain. Calibration coefficients are first calculated for each meter individually, then stored in
on-chip EEPROM and later retrieved during firmware initialization. The coefficients trim the calculations such that
measurement results are accurate within limits.
Digital calibration is accurate and efficient, it is quick to perform, requires little or no manual intervention, and does not
degrade over time. In addition, calibration data is safely stored in the internal EEPROM.
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3.8.1
Phase
Phase displacements between signals are introduced by current transformers, input filters and by the multiplexing of
input channels. Some DC immune transformers may well introduce phase displacements of more than 5 degrees while
the multiplexing introduces a time difference between all channels, inversely proportional to the sampling frequency. At
approximately 2400Hz sampling frequency, the time delay is 1/2400Hz = 0.42ms, which means that at 50Hz mains
frequency there is a phase difference of 360 x (50Hz/2400Hz) = 7.5 degrees.
The phase displacements are adjusted using linear interpolation, which is fast, easy, and sufficiently accurate. The
limitation is that linear interpolation introduces a constant time delay to the signal, which means phase can be correctly
adjusted for one frequency only. Signal components above mains frequency, i.e. harmonics, cannot be simultaneously
phase-adjusted using this approach. Typically, though, this is not a problem since most of the signal energy lies in the
first harmonic.
The algorithm uses two subsequent samples to interpolate an intermediate point. This means that the higher the
sampling frequency, the lower the phase adjustment margin. At approximately 2400Hz sampling rate (800Hz per
channel) and 50Hz mains frequency, the highest phase delay that can be interpolated is 360 x (50Hz/800Hz) = 22.5
degrees.
The effect of the phase calibration coefficients is shown in the following equation:
Equation 3-9. Effect of phase calibration coefficient.
Z=
PCC 360 ° × f M × 128 × 13 × 3
×
65536
f CLK
Here PCC is the phase calibration coefficient; fM is the mains frequency and fCLK the system clock frequency. There is
one phase calibration coefficient for each input channel, i.e. three in total.
Note:
The 16-bit phase calibration coefficients are treated unsigned.
3.8.2
Current Gain
Magnitude errors are introduced to all measurement results due to variations in discrete component values, but are
easily corrected using a set of gain calibration coefficients. There are separate gain coefficients for voltage and each
amplification range of both current channels, i.e. 1 + 2 x 3 = 7 in total.
Current samples are filtered, phase adjusted and then accumulated. For active power calculations, the current samples
are first multiplied with voltage samples and then accumulated. At the end of each calculation cycle all accumulation
registers are normalized and the results are then multiplied with corresponding gain coefficients. For each current
channel, one of three gain coefficients is used, depending on the amplifier setting, i.e. different coefficients are used at
low, medium and high amplification.
The effect of current gain coefficients is shown in the following equation.
Equation 3-10. Effect of current gain coefficients.
I CAL =
I
IG N
Here IG is the current gain coefficient and N denotes amplifier setting (N=1,2,3). The same equation holds for both live
and neutral current measurements.
The 16-bit coefficients are treated unsigned.
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3.8.2.1 Example
Assume meter is configured for 10A maximum current. At full-scale, sinusoidal input and lowest amplifier setting the
peak-to-peak value of sampled data is 1023. After prescaling (x32) and DC removal, the amplitude of the sampled
signal is:
Equation 3-11. Amplitude after HPF.
î =
255 × 1023
= ±130432
2
After scaling (1/64) and taking the square of each sample, the amplitude is now ±4153444. At 4MHz system clock, 128
ADC prescaler and 50Hz mains there are 16.026 samples per mains cycle. Accumulating over 25 x 16.026 = 401
samples, normalizing and taking the square root, the result before calibration is:
Equation 3-12. Result before calibration.
I=
401 × 4143444
= 1713 .755
401 × 2
Dividing the result with a calibration coefficient of 1713.755 / 10 = 171.3755 the result is:
Equation 3-13. Result after calibration.
I CAL =
3.8.3
1713.755
= 10 .000
171.3755
Voltage Gain
Voltage is calibrated similarly as current, but since gain remains constant only one coefficient is required. The effect of
the voltage gain coefficient, UG, is shown in the following equation.
Equation 3-14. Effect of voltage gain coefficient.
U CAL =
U × UG
65536
The 16-bit gain coefficient is treated unsigned.
3.8.4
Active Power Gain
Active power measurements do not require a dedicated gain coefficient, but use current and voltage gain coefficients.
Measurement results are multiplied with the voltage coefficient and the corresponding current coefficient. The effect is
shown in the following equation.
Equation 3-15. Effect of voltage and current gain coefficients on active power.
PCAL =
3.8.5
P
UG × IG N
Meter Constant
The meter constant dictates the relationship between amount of active power measured and the frequency of the
Energy Pulse output. The larger the active power, the higher the frequency, f EP, as illustrated in the equation below.
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Equation 3-16. Effect of meter constant.
f EP =
P × MC
3 600 000
Here P is active power in watts and MC is the meter constant in impulses/kilowatt-hour. Note that the pulse frequency
also depends on the system clock. The above equation assumes a system clock of 4MHz.
The calibration coefficient is treated as a 16-bit, unsigned integer.
3.8.5.1 Limitations
The Energy Pulse output is typically wired to a LED and used for calibration and verification purposes. The pulse must
be sufficiently long to light the LED for an optical reader to register it, but also sufficiently short to allow a reasonably
high output frequency. The default is 50ms active time, which limits the frequency to about 10Hz. At 4MHz system
clock, 10A maximum current and 230V nominal voltage, the maximum meter constant is approximately 15000imp/kWh.
To increase the meter constant above this, the maximum current and the pulse length must be decreased.
Another limitation is the quantization of the pulse interval. At default system clock (4MHz) and default T/C prescaler
(1024), the timer is updated once every 1024/4000000 = 0.256ms. Assuming highest default pulse rate (10Hz) the
pulse interval is 100ms and the highest quantization inaccuracy is ±(0.256/100) = ±0.256%. For practical purposes it is
recommended to scale system clock, maximum current and meter constant such that the timer/counter interval never
goes below, say, 500 timer ticks. By default (4MHz, 10A, 230V, 10000imp/kWh) the pulse interval will not go below 500
ticks.
3.8.6
Display Constant
A pulse pair is provided to drive a stepper-motor counter. Typically, the required display pulse rate is much lower than
the energy pulse rate. The pulse rate, fDP, can be adjusted using the DPC calibration coefficient, as follows:
Equation 3-17. Effect of display pulse constant.
f DP =
f EP
DPC
Here fDP is the energy pulse rate. The 16-bit display constant is treated unsigned.
3.8.7
Coefficient Layout
The EEPROM layout of calibration coefficients is shown in Table 3-1. All coefficients are 16-bit wide and stored with
high byte first, then low byte.
Table 3-1.
Calibration coefficient layout in EEPROM.
ADDR.
+ 0x00
0x00
PCC0
PCC1
PCC2
ILG0
0x08
ILG1
ILG2
ING0
ING1
0x10
ING2
UG
MC
DPC
CRCW
CRC16
0x18
+ 0x01
+ 0x02
+ 0x03
+ 0x04
+ 0x05
+ 0x06
+ 0x07
PCC is the phase calibration coefficient and ILG and ING are the current gain coefficients for live and neutral wires,
respectively. UG is the voltage gain coefficient, MC the meter constant and DPC the display pulse constant. CRC16
contains the checksum for the low 32 bytes of the EEPROM. If CRCW is set to 0x4357 then the checksum is calculated
by the firmware and written to CRC16.
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3.9
Program Constants
Program constants are values that can be altered before the firmware is compiled, but not afterwards. Typical constants
are various bit and flag definitions, but also included are some fundamental invariables, such as pulse lengths and
sample rates. Some of the fundamental constants are discussed below.
3.9.1
AMP_LO
This constant defines the threshold when to increase amplification of current signal. Amplification is increased when the
amplitude of the filtered current signal drops below this level. Should be below (255 x 1023) / current gain.
3.9.2
SAT_LO, SAT_HI
These are low and high levels, which define saturation limits for current samples. Amplification is decreased when
unconditioned current samples go below low limit or above high limit. Recommended a few LSB’s below max. and
above min.
3.9.3
GAIN_HOLD
This is the number of samples to wait before allowing a new gain switch to take place. By default, the amplifier settles in
a few hundred sampling cycles, which means a value of 100 should be enough.
3.9.4
I_MIN
I_MIN is the starting current in amperes. Active power readings are cleared when current measurement drops below
this limit. It should be set according to IEC 61036 standard.
3.9.5
OFFSET
Constant offset, which is added to all measurement results. If properly scaled, it improves linearity at low amplitudes. It
should be around ½ LSB x 255 = 128.
3.9.6
NMAX
This is the number of samples to accumulate during each calculation cycle. Large values create more stable results but
at longer intervals. It should be an integral multiple of number of samples per mains cycle.
3.9.7
NORM
This is the inverse of NMAX. It is a pre-calculated constant, which is used at the end of each accumulation cycle.
3.9.8
DP_ON
This is the length and spacing of display pulses, in units of sampling cycles.
3.10
Duty Cycle
The main program is mostly idle (looping) and is interrupted only when a fresh sample is available from the ADC or
when the timer/counter requires service. The most frequently occurring event is the ADC interrupt service, which must
be complete before the next service request arrives. In order to monitor that the ADC ISR does not consume too many
instructions cycles the service routine sets and clears a pulse upon entry and exit, respectively.
By default, the duty cycle pulse is routed to the lowest bit of port B. The duty cycle is readily monitored with an
oscilloscope connected to PB0. The closer the duty cycle is to 100%, the higher is the risk that there will not be enough
clock cycles to process all data. A conservative duty cycle is below 50%.
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3.11
Summary: Defaults
As a summary, some firmware defaults are shown in Table 3-2.
Table 3-2.
Firmware defaults.
Parameter
Value
Note
Compiler
IAR™ 6.2
Device
ATmega88
8KB Flash, 1024b SRAM, 512b EEPROM
Starting current
2mA
See I_MIN constant
Calculation cycle
200ms
See system clock and NMAX constant
Energy pulse rate
10000imp/kWh
See MC calibration coefficient
Energy pulse length
50ms
See system clock and OCR1B initialization
Display pulse rate
100imp/kWh
See DPC calibration coefficient
Display pulse length
100ms
See system clock and DP_ON constant
Terminal setting
38400 bauds
See USART initialization
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4.
Setting up the Meter
In stand-alone mode the meter only needs to be attached to the mains wires. During calibration and testing, the meter
must be connected to a computer terminal via the serial interface. For programming purposes the meter must be
connected to a computer via the In-System Programming (ISP) interface.
It is recommended to isolate the meter from other hardware using optocouplers.
4.1
Warning: Ground Precaution
The meter must be operated with care when connected to mains (high voltage) lines. One common pitfall is to neglect
ground wirings and nonchalantly proceed with connecting the meter to external hardware, such as a personal computer.
The results can be destructive.
Figure 4-1. Short circuit between live and neutral wire.
L
N
OTHER
HARDWARE
465
SHORT
CIRCUIT
The meter has no galvanic isolation from live wires, which means even the apparently harmless meter ground is firmly
bolted to the live voltage. Connecting the meter to another mains-powered hardware can lead to short-circuit between
live and neutral wires, as shown in Figure 4-1. Not a recommended thing to do.
4.2
Hardware Setup
For stand-alone operation, the meter is simply connected to the mains wires as illustrated in the schematic. The meter
automatically starts to measure power and stores energy consumption data in the display counter.
Note:
The meter needs to be calibrated before reliable measurement data can be expected.
For programming, calibration and testing purposes the meter needs to be temporarily connected to external hardware,
such as a computer or a microcontroller. The external hardware writes the firmware into the Flash memory of the meter
MCU. It then assesses the accuracy of the meter and writes calibration data into the EEPROM of the MCU. The meter
is ready to run in stand-alone mode after programming and calibration has completed successfully.
A general illustration on how to connect the meter for programming, calibration and metering is shown in Figure 4-2.
Note:
This is a generalized block schematic and does not include all recommended safety precautions.
Figure 4-2. Connecting the meter to external hardware.
SIGNAL
GENERATOR
HIGH
VOLTAGE
& CURRENT
465
ISP
USART
STK500,
AVRISP,
JTAGICE mkII,
or similar
STK500,
or similar
RS-232
Computer
running
AVR Studio
and
terminal
RS-232
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4.2.2
Warning: Galvanic Isolation
It is recommended to create a galvanic isolation barrier between the mains-coupled meter and the other hardware. This
can be done using optocouplers at the ISP and USART interface or at the RS-232 interface. Optocoupling both ISP and
USART makes the Atmel STK500 and debugger “safe”, but requires many optocouplers. Alternatively, creating the
galvanic barrier at the RS-232 interfaces requires less optocouplers but makes all devices except the PC hazardous.
Another alternative is to use an isolation transformer to create a floating front-end, which can then be bolted to the same
ground as the rest of the electronics.
4.2.3
Programming
The meter AVR is programmed via the In-System Programming (ISP) interface, which means the device does not need
to be removed for programming. The ISP connector (J1, see schematic) is connected to a programmer (STK500, Atmel
AVRISP, or similar) or a debugger (Atmel AVR JTAGICE mkII, or similar). Software such as Atmel AVR Studio® can
then be used for programming Flash and EEPROM of the target AVR.
4.2.4
Calibration and Metering
The meter constantly sends measurement data via the asynchronous interface. To read measurement data (also during
calibration), the asynchronous interface must be connected. The asynchronous connector (J2, see Chapter 8 Schematic) is wired to a microcontroller directly or to a computer via a RS-232 buffer. The asynchronous interface
cannot be wired to a RS-232 port directly, since it is not buffered.
A RS-232 buffer is readily found on the STK500. Connect the asynchronous interface of the meter to STK500 pins
labeled RS232 SPARE. Then connect the STK500 D-connector labeled RS232 SPARE to the serial port of the
computer. Use terminal software of choice to read data from the serial port.
A general illustration on how to connect the meter for programming, calibration and metering is shown in Figure 4-3.
Also shown in the figure is a recommended optical isolation board.
Figure 4-3. Example setup for calibration and/or metering.
HIGH VOLTAGE
&
HIGH CURRENT
GALVANIC ISOLATION
DC
VOUT
V0
SIGNAL
GENERATOR
DC
"SAFE" SIDE
PC
VIN
GND
POWER SUPPLY
RxD
Terminal
STK500
/RST
J1
SCK
MOSI
TxD
RS232 SPARE
RS232 CTRL
COM1
RS232 SPARE
COM2
J2
MISO
4.3
AVR Studio
465
ISP6PIN
Firmware Setup
To download the firmware into the meter first open the compiler workspace, compile the project and use AVR Studio to
send the compiled file to the target, as described above. Alternatively, use AVR Studio to send the precompiled
firmware directly to the target.
Set up fuses to match hardware environment. The default is to use external crystal, with full output swing and long startup time. This means fuses CKSEL are set to 0111 and fuses SUT to 11. Fuses CKDIV8 and CKOUT should be unprogrammed.
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5.
Calibration Example
There are many methods for calibrating the meter. Here is presented one. This method requires a programmable, highvoltage, high-current signal generator. Also required is hardware for programming the AVR in the meter. An Atmel
STK500 can be used, but a debugger such as the Atmel AVR JTAGICE mkII is recommended, since it allows EEPROM
to be edited more easily.
5.1
Setup
Connect the signal generator to the meter front-end. Then connect the meter to a PC using a RS-232 buffer circuit, such
as the spare RS-232 interface on the STK500. Start the terminal software on the PC and configure it to receive data
from the meter.
5.2
Step 1 – Initialization
Start by writing the following set of calibration coefficients to the EEPROM. This will set phase calibration to zero and
gain to unity in all calculations.
Table 5-1.
Initialization of calibration coefficients.
ADDR.
+ 0x00
+ 0x01
+ 0x02
+ 0x03
+ 0x04
+ 0x05
+ 0x06
+ 0x07
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x01
0x08
0x00
0x01
0x00
0x01
0x00
0x01
0x00
0x01
0x10
0x00
0x01
0xFF
0xFF
0x27
0x10
0x00
0x64
0x18
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x43
0x57
0x00
0x00
If using a programmer, create a text file as shown below and load the contents of the file into the EEPROM. The file
content is of type Intel® Hex.
:1000000000000000000000010001000100010001EB
:100010000001FFFF271000640000000043570000AC
:00000001FF
Next, reset the meter. This will load the calibration coefficients into memory.
5.3
Step 2 – Gain
Apply nominal voltage and large – preferably full-scale – current to the meter. Voltage and current should be in phase,
i.e. the power factor should be unity. Allow measurement results to settle for a few seconds and then record voltage and
current readings. Calculate gain coefficients using the previously presented equations.
Table 5-2.
Input
230V
5A
PF 1
Example readings.
Measured
Gain error
Calibration coefficient
U = 1241.699
5.3987
UG = 65536 / 5.3987 = 0x2F6B
IL = 630.63784
126.1276
ILG[0] = 0x007E
IN = 626.58277
125.3166
ING[0] = 0x007D
When using a programmer or a debugger of choice, load gain coefficients to EEPROM. In this example, the following
coefficients are loaded (see Table 5-3):
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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Table 5-3.
New calibration coefficients.
Address
Coefficient
Data
0x06
ILG0, High Byte
0x00
0x07
ILG0, Low Byte
0x7E
0x0C
ING0, High Byte
0x00
0x0D
ING0, Low Byte
0x7D
0x12
UG, High Byte
0x2F
0x13
UG, Low Byte
0x6B
0x1C
CRCW, High Byte
0x43
0x1D
CRCW, Low Byte
0x57
Reset the meter.
5.4
Step 3 – Phase
Continue to apply nominal voltage and a large current to the meter. Allow readings to stabilize and then record active
power, voltage and current readings. Use voltage and current readings to calculate apparent power; S = UI. Compare
with active power readings and evaluate phase error, as follows:
Equation 5-1. Phase error.
⎛P⎞
φ = acos ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟
⎝S⎠
Derive phase calibration coefficient based on phase error, and add the result to the default phase calibration coefficient.
An example is shown in Table 5-4.
Table 5-4.
Input
Example readings.
Measured
Apparent power
Phase error
U = 230.038
230V
5A
PF 1
PCC
PCC0 = 0
IL = 4.99541
PL = 1131.194
SL = 1149.1341
PhiL = 10.138
PCC1 = 0x7359
IN = 5.00943
PN = 1106.641
SN = 1152.3593
PhiN = 16.193
PCC2 = 0xB83E
Enter phase calibration coefficients into EEPROM (locations 0x00…0x05), leave other coefficients untouched, and write
0x4357 to CRCW. Reset the meter.
5.5
Step 4 – Final Gain
Still apply nominal voltage and high current to the meter. Record current measurements, and then reduce input current
by a factor of about 8, so that the meter automatically switches to medium amplification range and that the sampled
data has high amplitude. Again record current and then again reduce input current by a factor of about 8. Record third
set of current measurements. Then use the recorded data to calculate final gain coefficients for all current ranges, as
shown in Table 5-5.
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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Table 5-5.
Note:
Example readings.
Input
Measured
Gain error
Calibration coefficient
230V, 5A
IL = 4.90191
IN = 4.93608
0.9804 x 126.1276 = 123.66
0.9872 x 125.3166 = 123.71
ILG[0] = 0x007C
ING[0] = 0x007B
230V, 1A
IL = 1017.25948
IN =1016.93559
1017.25948 / 1 = 1017
1017
ILG[1] = 0x03F9
ING[1] = 0x03F9
230V, 0.1A
IL = 687.69546
IN = 690.78431
687.69546 / 0.1 = 6877
6908
ILG[2] = 0x1ADD
ING[2] = 0x1AFC
The gain errors for low amplification are multiplied with the previously evaluated. This is because the previous
coefficients were in effect during this set of measurement.
Write new current gain coefficients to EEPROM (locations 0x06…0x11), update CRCW to 0x4357 and reset meter.
5.6
Step 5 – Verify
The example meter was tested after the above calibration. The signal generator was connected to the front end of the
meter and was programmed to perform a current sweep from 10mA to 10A. Active power readings were recorded from
the Energy Pulse output. All measurement results were within 1%.
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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6.
Measurement Results
Measurement results were recorded for a manually assembled prototype at room temperature.
6.1
Power Consumption
Table 6-1 shows typical current consumption figures for this application.
Table 6-1.
6.2
Typical current consumption figures.
Condition
Typical
Duration
Meter running, all LEDs off, display pulses low
3.0mA
Continuous
Meter running, all LEDs on, display pulses low
7.5mA
Continuous
Meter running, all LEDs on, display counter increment
12.5mA
100ms
Accuracy
The measurement accuracy was tested on a calibrated energy meter. The reference was a programmable, three-phase
signal generator (type Omicron, model CMC56). The signal generator was programmed to supply the meter with known
voltages and currents at various power factors and then read back the frequency of the energy pulse (EP) at each
setting.
For each measurement point, only one pulse interval was recorded, i.e. no averaging was done. The results from 57
measurement points were then gathered into three curves illustrating the dynamic accuracy for three given power
factors.
Figure 6-1 illustrates how meter accuracy stays within 1% over a wide dynamic range. The current scale has been
normalized, i.e. 1.000 corresponds to maximum current (10A, 20A, or whatever). The solid line represents the relative
error at unity power factor, i.e. when voltage and current are in phase. The dotted line indicates relative error at power
factor 0.8, capacitive, and the dashed line shows relative error at power factor 0.5, inductive.
Figure 6-1. Typical measurement accuracy.
+3.00%
PF = 0.5i
+2.00%
PF = 0.8c
+1.00%
-1.00%
PF = 1
-2.00%
(SCALE NORMALISED)
-3.00%
0.001
0.010
0.100
1.000
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.
Flow Charts
7.1
Main Program
Figure 7-1. Main program.
RESET
INITIALISE
KEY PRESSED?
YES
KEY SERVICE
NO
CYCLE FULL?
YES
CYCLE SERVICE
NO
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.1.2
Initialization
Figure 7-2. Initialization.
INITIALISE
Initialise()
Set up I/O pins.
Configure Timer /Counter.
Configure USART & ADC.
ReadCalibration()
Read calibration coefficients
from EEPROM.
InitGainControl()
Initialise variables that control
the gain.
SetGain(LOW)
Set low gain on both current
input channels.
Turn on Watchdog & Interrupts
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.1.3
Character Input Service
Figure 7-3. Character input service.
KEY SERVICE
getchar() = 'x' OR
getchar() = 'X' ?
YES
Service for Key X
NO
END
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7.1.4
Calculation Cycle Service
Figure 7-4. Calculation cycle service.
CYCLE SERVICE
Clear CYCLE_FULL Flag
Make a copy of accumulated data,
then clear accumulator to make
way for new data.
Sum = Accumulator
Accumulator = 0
Adjust Gain &
Clear Gain Control Flags
Increase or decrease gain of current
channels, according to control flags.
Then reset flags.
Normalise &
Add/Subtract Offset
Normalise data, then add a constant
offset to it. Subtract, if accumulated
data is negative.
Take square root of current and voltage
data, then multiply accumulated data
with calibration coefficients.
Calculate & Calibrate
RMS Current
Below Threshold?
YES
Clear Active Power
NO
CSS
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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CSS
Active Power
Above Threshold?
YES
NO
NO
P(L) within
5% of P(N) ?
Signal Earth Fault
YES
Calculate and set new pulse rate,
based on active power measurements.
SetPulse()
P(L) and P(N)
Both Positive ?
NO
Signal Reversed Current
YES
Display Measurements
Send measurement data over USART interface.
Voltage in volts, current in amps and active
power in watts.
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.1.5
SetPulse()
Figure 7-5. SetPulse().
SetPulse(Power)
Active power can be positive or negative,
depending on the flow direction of current.
Sign is irrelevant when calculting pulse interval.
Take Absolute of Power
Power <> 0 ?
YES
T=
3600 x fCLK
Power x PRESC x MC
fCLK = Clock frequency
PRESC = T/C Prescaler
MC = Meter constant
NO
Pulse Interval T = TMAX
T < TMIN ?
YES
T = TMIN
NO
T > TMAX ?
NO
Extended Counter = T / CMAX
Counter = Remainder
YES
Set New Compare Match for
T/C and New TOP Value for
Extended Counter.
YES
Extended Counter = CMAX
Counter = CMAX
Extended Counter
TOP Value Set ?
NO
Set Counter Value as
New T/C Compare Match
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.2
Timer/Counter ISRs
Figure 7-6. Timer/Counter compare A.
TC1_COMPA_ISR
This is handled automatically
by Timer/Counter hardware.
(Set or Clear T/C Output)
TOP Value Set?
YES
TOP > 0 means extended counter is active.
Maintain counter as long as TOP > 0.
Increase Counter X
NO
Counter X < TOP?
Clear Counter X
YES
Set T/C to Clear Output
on Next Match
NO
Counter X > TOP?
NO
YES
Clear Counter X, Set OCR to
Max, Clear on Next Match
Configure T/C to Clear
Output on Next Match
Increase Counter D
DPC is a calibration constant
and can therefore be adjusted.
Counter D = DPC?
YES
Set DPP Output High
Set Display Pulse Flag High
DPP and DPN pulses are maintained by ADC_ISR
function after display pulse flag has been.
NO
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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Figure 7-7.
Timer/Counter compare B.
TC1_COMPB_ISR
Configure T/C to
Clear Output on Next Match
Force Compare Match
Configure T/C to
Set Output on Next Match
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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7.3
ADC ISR
Figure 7-8. ADC ISR.
ADC_ISR
Voltage Sample?
NO
Current signals are inverted in
the gain stage. Invert them back.
Invert Sample
YES
Apply High-Pass Filter
Hysteresis Counter > 0 ?
NO
Remove DC Offset from Signal.
YES
Sample > Max
or Sample < Min ?
YES
Active Gain Control Flag
LESSGAIN
YES
Clear Gain Control Flag
MOREGAIN
NO
Reset Gain Control Flags &
Decrease Counter
Filtered Sample
Above Threshold?
NO
Apply Phase Calibration
Accumulate Data and set
CYCLE_FULL Flag when Full
Increase ADC Multiplexer
Maintain DPP & DPN Outputs
END
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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L
LOAD
T1
230V
N
4
U2
8
C31
C30
C52
AVCC
R30
T2
R41
14
7
C54
C53
R32
R36
VCC
U3
R37
R31
R40
C40
Z1
U3A
U3B
R33
6
8
12
11
2
3
U3C
U3D
R43
C55
1 2 3 4 5 6 , 7 kWh
13
1
5
4
R42
R53
2
3
9
10
R54
R34
U2A
X1
1
U2B
C58
5
6
R44
DPN
DPP
C59
7
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
R10
U1
PB0
PD7
PD6
PD5
PB7 (XTAL2)
PB6 (XTAL1)
GND
VCC
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1 (TXD)
PD0 (RXD)
PC3
PC4
PC5
C11
(OC1A) PB1
(/SS) PB2
(MOSI) PB3
(MISO) PB4
(SCK) PB5
AVCC
AREF
GND
(ADC0) PC0
(ADC1) PC1
(ADC2) PC2
L50
D11
D10
PC6 (/RESET)
C50
VCC
C10
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
AVCC
C56
R35
R45
VOUT
U4
GND
+VIN
C57
R24
C12
C51
VCC
D52
D51
/RST
SCK
GND
MOSI
6
4
2
J2
D50
GND
RxD
C20
MISO VCC
J1
3
1
R21
R20
VCC
4
2
R23
R22
465
R52
R51
R50
GND
TxD
Kim Meyer, Atmel Finland, 2004
5
3
1
EP
EARTH
REVDIR
V1
VCC
8.
Schematic
Figure 8-1. Schematic.
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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9.
Bill-of-Material (BOM)
Order codes are according to Farnell catalogue in 2004. Display counter and current transformers are not part of the
inventory.
Table 9-1.
Bill-of-material.
Reference
Component
Value
Order code
C10
Capacitor, X2, metalized polyester
0.68µF
3549460
C11
Capacitor, electrolytic, 16V
470µF
3201508
C12, C31, C57
Capacitor, electrolytic, 16V
10µF
3201454
C20, C30, C40
Capacitor, electrolytic, 16V
47µF
3201478
C50 … C56
Capacitor, ceramic
100nF
896755
C58, C59
Capacitor, ceramic
18pF
236950
D10
Diode, Zener, 500mW, 15V
BZX55-C15
369081
D11
Diode, 1A, 400V
1N4004
251707
D50, D51
LED, red, 5mm, low current
HLMP-4700
323135
D52
LED, yellow, 5mm, low current
HLMP-4719
323147
J1
Straight pin header, 6-way
2x3
511079
J2
Straight pin header, 2-way
1x2
143187
R10
Resistor, 1W, 500V, 5%, carbon film
470Ω
510476
R20, R23, R37
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
680kΩ
333037
R21, R24, R35, R45
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
1kΩ
332690
R22, R36
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
3.3MΩ
333116
R30, R40
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
68Ω
332550
R31, R41
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
6.8kΩ
332793
R32, R42
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
39kΩ
332884
R33, R43
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
330kΩ
332999
R34, R44
Resistor, 0.4W, 5%, metal film
470kΩ
333013
R50, R51, R52
Resistor, 0.125W, 5%, carbon film
1kΩ
477783
R53, R54
Resistor, 0.125W, 5%, carbon film
10Ω
477667
T1, T2
Current transformer, Tae Hwa Trans
TD76V
N/A
U1
8-bit Atmel AVR Microcontroller
Atmega88
N/A
U2
Dual, low-voltage, rail-to-rail op amp
LMV358
3555768
U3
Quad bilateral switch
CD4066BCN
380957
U4
Linear regulator, 3.3V
LM1117MP-3.3
120765
V1
Varistor, 40J
250V
318619
X1
Crystal, quartz
4.000MHz
492917
Z1
Display counter
L50
Inductor
N/A
10µH
N/A
This BOM does not include any price estimates, since local variations can be large.
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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10.
Developing the Meter Further
This application has been created as a cost-effective alternative for tamper-proof, single-phase metering. Not all
customers may base their decision on the same assumptions as we have and therefore some customers may
experience an urge to redesign some parts of the meter. We do not only encourage the customer to do so, but also
provide some discussion and suggestions on how to get started with it.
10.1
Analog Front End
The current front end includes operational amplifiers providing input signals for the A/D inputs of the AVR. It should be
noted that the ADC input contains an S/H (sample and hold) capacitor and that operational amplifiers are not very good
at driving capacitive loads (capacitive loads introduce phase lags into the output signal, which reduces phase margin in
the amplifier). Hence, there needs to be a series resistor between the amplifier output and the ADC input. Typically, a 1kΩ resistor will do nicely, but this needs to be verified against the data sheet of the manufacturer of the operational
amplifier.
There is no reason why additional gain ranges could not be implemented, using the same ideology as illustrated in this
design. Naturally, there is a limit on how much the input signals can be amplified before noise starts to degrade
measurement accuracy, but it is possible to increase the dynamic range above the present. Alternatively, adding more
gain ranges and reducing the range difference from current eight to, say, two or four may provide a more linear transfer
function and increase the absolute accuracy to better than 1%. Both alternatives are included at little extra cost (only
switches and a few resistors required).
10.2
Power Supply
The power supply uses half-wave rectification. The efficiency of the power supply can be increased by using full-wave
rectification. This means that at a cost of a few extra diodes, the power supply will be able to deliver more current to the
meter without drawing more energy from the mains lines.
The power consumption of the supply is around 10VA, which may prove too high for some applications. For example,
IEC60136 standard limits the maximum power consumption to 10VA. With the component values given in this
document, power consumption is just around 10VA. To lower the consumption, reduce the size of C10 (see Chapter 8 Schematic) and recalculate necessary component values, as described earlier. If C10 is made too small, the input
voltage to the regulator will not rise high enough for regulation to work properly.
Power consumption of the microcontroller section can be decreased by putting the device into sleep at the end of each
sampling cycle and waking it up again when a new data conversion is ready.
10.3
Microcontroller Section
The microcontroller can be configured to run from internal RC clock, as described in the data sheet. Using the internal
oscillator removes the need for an external crystal and lowers the overall price of the meter. The drawback is the
internal oscillator (just like any RC oscillator) is sensitive to variations in temperature. This means the frequency
changes with temperature and that measurement results will change accordingly. In addition, the bit error rate of
asynchronous communication will increase if the system clock is not stable enough.
This application note is written with the Atmel ATmega88 in mind, but the design is easy to migrate to almost any other
AVR. Alternative design ideas include:
•
Remove tamper detection logic and turn the design into a standard single-phase meter. Firmware should then
fit into 4KB and the microcontroller can, for example, be replaced by an Atmel ATmega48
•
Add functions such as remote reading, demand recording or multiple tariffs. Upgrade to Atmel ATmega168, for
example, if the firmware exceeds 8KB
•
Add integrated LCD support simply by migrating to Atmel ATmega169
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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10.4
Meter Firmware
No software is ever complete and there are probably as many potential improvements as there are readers of this
document. The good news is that the firmware is open source and can be edited to fit any application.
Some recommended starting points for software enhancements include:
•
•
•
•
Put the MCU to sleep as often as possible
Add apparent power, S, to measurement set. Hint: S = UI
Add reactive power, Q, to measurement set. Hint: S2 = P2 + Q2
Consider alternate reactive power approach. Hint: If u(t) is delayed 90 degrees then reactive power can be
calculated the same way as active power, i.e. Q = Int{u(t-90) x i(t)}. Note: academic discussion on this
method’s validity under non-sinusoidal conditions has been recorded since 1927 (see C. I. Budeanu,
“Puissances reactives et fictives”, Instytut Romain de l’Energie)
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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11.
Revision History
Doc. Rev.
Date
Comments
2566B
08/2013
New document template. The BOM has been updated
2566A
07/2004
Initial document release
Atmel AVR465: Single-Phase Power/Energy Meter with Tamper Detection [APPLICATION NOTE]
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