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    Reverse polarity of heater (peltier heating/cooling)

    Duet Hardware and wiring
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    • blandified
      blandified last edited by blandified

      Actually a DPDT relay would be simpler than an H-bridge, just thinking outloud.

      The approach would be the same though:

      if (desiredTemp < currentTemp)
      // Send a control voltage to DPDT relay to send current one direction
      // Do cooling function (might need to swap some increment/decrements in existing code)
      else
      // Stop the control voltage to DPDT relay to have current go the other direction
      // Regular Heat.cpp functionality

      edit: this guy talks about it here using the GPIO pins, but I believe all our GPIO pins are filled because of our Duex5 expansion board.

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      • blandified
        blandified last edited by blandified

        Just as FYI, this is the peltier we bought and will be using.

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        • blandified
          blandified last edited by blandified

          @dc42 Actually, is there a more detailed spec sheet of how the pins on the extruder heaters work?

          This is our peltier heater (and technically it should cool): https://tetech.com/product/te-195-1-0-0-8/

          1.) When we hook up the peltier directly, we are able to raise the temperature to a set amount (although it does overshoot a bit so is currently unreliable).

          2.) No matter the polarity of the peltier, it only gets hot and doesn't get cold.

          3.) Also, both sides of the peltier get hot instead of one side getting hot and the other side getting cold.

          So...that's why I ask if there is a more detailed spec on the pins of the extruder heaters, we would like to check to make sure the voltage/current/etc being supplied is compatible with the peltier shown in the link above.

          Any ideas?

          Thank you!

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          • dragonn
            dragonn last edited by

            I am curious for what are you going to use that peltier? It is only rated up to 80C, are you making a heatbed using peltier devices?

            blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • dc42
              dc42 administrators last edited by

              If you want one side of a Peltier to cool, you must prevent the other side getting too hot, e.g. by having a heatsink on it with a fan blowing cool air over it. Also take care not to exceed the ideal current of the Peltier you are using.

              Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
              Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
              http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

              blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • blandified
                blandified @dragonn last edited by

                @dragonn

                We are working on a bio-printer, so we only need to heat up the cell solutions to a maximum of 80deg but we also need to be able to cool it (ideally to about 4deg).

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                • blandified
                  blandified @dc42 last edited by

                  @dc42 We have been working on this, with the same result so far.

                  Which is why we are looking to see exactly what the pins are/do for the extruder heaters. We want to make sure the + and - pins are compatible with the peltier.

                  Do you have any additional technical specs of these pins?

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                  • dc42
                    dc42 administrators last edited by

                    The extruder heater outputs have one pin connected to +VIN and the other connected to ground via the mosfet. The pins are marked VIN and E0- (or E1-) on the underside of the board. However, on earlier PCB revisions the markings are incorrect. The E0- or E1- pin is always the pin closest to the E1 motor connector, and the other pin is VIN.

                    Maximum recommended current power output is 6A each. The mosfets can handle much more; the limitations is due to the PCB traces and the terminal blocks.

                    There is a link to the Duet schematic on the wiki.

                    Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                    Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                    http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                    blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • blandified
                      blandified @dc42 last edited by

                      @dc42

                      1.) Does this mean that VIN is 24V (we have a 24v PSU) and E0- is 0V?

                      Just wanting to clarify this point because I believe the peltier needs + and - voltage instead of + and ground/0 voltage, I will double check with the peltier supplier though.

                      2.) If that is the case, I am assuming the voltage cannot be adjusted to be +12 and -12V because the mosfet pulls the E0- pin to ground and therefore cannot be changed from the original 24V to 0V?

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                      • dragonn
                        dragonn last edited by

                        Maybe I don't have much experience with peltier devices. But from a electrical point of view they is no difference between for example +12V, -12V and +24V, 0V for a peltier device since it haves only two wires. I even have one and it works fine with just +12V and ground (I am doing an experiment with cooling the heatbreak with a peltier device :D).

                        blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • blandified
                          blandified @dragonn last edited by

                          @dragonn

                          Okay we just wanted to make sure the peltier didn't need to be operated in a specific-only way, but if your peltier works with 12V and ground then ours should too.

                          It is just strange because we can't get the peltier to cool at all, both sides get hot, even with a heatsink and fan, switching polarities doesn't work.

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                          • dragonn
                            dragonn last edited by

                            It only does that when connected to Duet? When you connected it directly to a power supply it still works like it should?

                            blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • blandified
                              blandified @dragonn last edited by

                              @dragonn

                              We actually haven't tried connecting directly to our power supply. We have this one here and were worried that the peltier would draw too much current and burn out. We will try when we meet again though!

                              dragonn 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • dc42
                                dc42 administrators last edited by

                                At full power (24V) the spec sheet at https://tetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/TE-195-1.0-0.8.pdf indicates that your peltier will generate a 150-200W of waste heat. To remove this effectively you will need the sort of heatsink and fan that is used for cooling the CPU in high-end PCs. So I suggest you use a lower voltage. Even at 12V there will bet 40-80W of waste heat to get rid of.

                                Please note, running the Peltier on 24V at 50% PWM is not the same as running it from 12V, unless you use a diode + inductor filter and a high enough PWM frequency.

                                Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • dragonn
                                  dragonn @blandified last edited by

                                  @blandified connecting it for short time (few seconds) wont damage it and it should already get a lite bit cold. And as far I know a Peltier device is maybe partly but it self limits the power when then temp difference between cold and hot side goes to big.

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                                  • blandified
                                    blandified @dc42 last edited by

                                    @dc42

                                    Ahhh this sounds like it may be the reason, thank you for pointing this out! We will experiment...

                                    Our Duet Ethernet is hooked up to a 24V 350W power supply, so as I understand it, that means the extruder heaters/motors/bed heater are all running off this 24V, which is why we chose 24V motors and heaters.

                                    But we want to take your suggestion and run the heaters at 12V instead. Is this something we can change internally (in the firmware or config file) or do we have to swap our 24V power supply with a 12V power supply in order to accomplish this?

                                    The closest thing I can find is this:

                                    M307 V12

                                    source: http://reprap.org/wiki/G-code#M307:_Set_or_report_heating_process_parameters

                                    "Vnnn VIN supply voltage at which the A parameter was calibrated (RepRapFirmware 1.20 and later). This allows the PID controller to compensate for changes in supply voltage. A value of zero disables compensation for changes in supply voltage. "

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                                    • dc42
                                      dc42 administrators last edited by

                                      You will need to provide either a second PSU or a buck regulator to provide 12V to drive the peltier.

                                      Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                      Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                      http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                      blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • blandified
                                        blandified @dc42 last edited by blandified

                                        @dc42

                                        If we measure the resistance of the peltier (let's just say it is 10kOhms), and then we take a 10kOhm resistor and put it in series with the peltier, voltage divider means that the voltage across the peltier should be half (12V).

                                        Is this viable? Assuming we can find a resistor that can handle up to 6A?

                                        dc42 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • dc42
                                          dc42 administrators @blandified last edited by dc42

                                          @blandified said in Reverse polarity of heater (peltier heating/cooling):

                                          @dc42

                                          If we measure the resistance of the peltier (let's just say it is 10kOhms), and then we take a 10kOhm resistor and put it in series with the peltier, voltage divider means that the voltage across the peltier should be half (12V).

                                          Is this viable? Assuming we can find a resistor that can handle up to 6A?

                                          It's possible in theory, but you would need a 4.1 ohm 35W resistor. A buck regulator is a less expensive and more efficient solution, and may give you an adjustable output voltage too.

                                          Another solution is to connect a high current inductor in series with the Peltier, and also connect a Schottky flyback diode in parallel with the combination. Then you can increase the PWM frequency to 50kHz and control the peltier current with PWM. The inductor would ideally be about 1mH, for example three of these https://www.digikey.co.uk/product-detail/en/wurth-electronics-inc/74437529203331/732-11718-ND/8134292 connected in series.

                                          Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                          Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                          http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • blandified
                                            blandified last edited by

                                            @dc42

                                            Thanks for the info!

                                            I bought this DC/DC regulator and will update you when it gets in

                                            https://www.amazon.com/Nextrox-Converter-Regulator-Step-Down/dp/B00BWKXTUU/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?ie=UTF8&qid=1524780116&sr=8-1-spons&keywords=24v+buck+regulator+12V&psc=1

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                                            • dragonn
                                              dragonn last edited by

                                              Remember - do not connect the DC/DC regulator directly to heater output - buck converts don't like be driven with PWM. The buck convert needs to be connected directly to the power supply and then the peltier device positive connection goes to the positive output of the buck convert. And the negative output from peltier device goes to the Duet heater output ground connection.

                                              blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                              • blandified
                                                blandified @dragonn last edited by blandified

                                                @dragonn

                                                I was not aware of this tbh. Thank you for info!

                                                I honestly thought the the regulator would go inbetween the heater outputs and the peltier, like in series between the two.

                                                I want to make sure I understand, so I drew a picture to clarify.

                                                https://imgur.com/a/fRSyRrN

                                                Does the negative output of the regulator go anywhere? (see X)

                                                Does the Vin of the heater output go anywhere? (see X)

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                                                • dragonn
                                                  dragonn last edited by

                                                  Both X - leave unconnected. Such buck converters don't provide galvanic isolation so the negative output from the regulator is directly connected to its negative input so it doesn't need to be connected anywhere. The E0 Vin is just always on, Duet switches when doing PWM the ground not the supply voltage - this is why we can use buck converters like this.

                                                  blandified 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                                  • blandified
                                                    blandified @dragonn last edited by

                                                    @dragonn

                                                    Thank you! The regulator will come in tonight so I will update you tomorrow.

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                                                    • blandified
                                                      blandified last edited by

                                                      @dc42

                                                      So for a test, we set our temp for 35degC and the peltier will heat up and maintain that temp assuming we cool the other side enough.

                                                      So heating is good. But would you be able to point us to the function that is controlling the heating process?

                                                      I ask this because we would like to modify it to be able to COOL instead of just heat.

                                                      For example, if we set the temp to cool to 10degC (with current temp at 25degC), the temperature sensor actually shows that the peltier tries to cool by a degree or half a degree but then it will shoot up rather crazily.

                                                      So I am thinking:

                                                      if (desiredTemp < currentTemp)
                                                      // Send a control voltage to DPDT relay to send current one direction
                                                      // Do cooling function (might need to swap some increment/decrements in existing code)
                                                      else
                                                      // Stop the control voltage to DPDT relay to have current go the other direction
                                                      // Regular Heat.cpp functionality

                                                      So basically if we want to heat, then the normal heat function occurs. But if we want to cool, then we select our COOl function.

                                                      So I guess the question is where do we find the heat function to edit this?

                                                      klcjr89 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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