High Voltage Hexfet Amp?

Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
Hello, a newbie here!

I have an application that requires as much voltage output as possible. I want to drive a piezo stack actuator up to 100V or more. Is there anything stopping me using the simple ‘maplin’ type design but up-grading components for the higher supply voltages? I’m only interested in +ve output too so could I run the amp off say +130 and -20V ? The piezo BTW behaves like a 100n capacitor at the frequency’s I’m interested in i.e up to 4KHz.

Thanks.
 
do you need DC response? - if you can get by with 50 Hz low frequency limit then you can use a transformer to step up a audio amp's output V, could C couple, add DC bias supply if you really need the offset

could use (cheap) standard toroidial mains transformers for 50 Hz-4 kHz range
 
Hello, a newbie here!

I have an application that requires as much voltage output as possible. I want to drive a piezo stack actuator up to 100V or more. Is there anything stopping me using the simple ‘maplin’ type design but up-grading components for the higher supply voltages? I’m only interested in +ve output too so could I run the amp off say +130 and -20V ? The piezo BTW behaves like a 100n capacitor at the frequency’s I’m interested in i.e up to 4KHz.

Thanks.
You can find some ideas in this thread:
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/soli...ating-ultra-high-voltage-building-blocks.html
 
cascaded Q not necessary, many multi-hundred V Q are available today, 400-600 V Mosfet are popular for offline switching supplies


true piezo will give a fixed displacement for DC

if you are generating sound, mechanical waves or other "AC", relative motion then the DC isn't required

transformer lower frequency limit is V*T product - use a 240 AC rated mains xfmr @ 50 Vac (= 140 V pk-pk ) and you could go as low as 50/4.8 ~= 10 Hz


electrostriction requires a DC bias - preferably a lot larger than the AC amplitude for good linearity
 
Last edited:
Thanks for that.

Well I only need 100V or so peak to peak and that only positive. I'm wondering if I can use something like:

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/EBB-250-Mosfet-Amplifier-Module-250W-RMS-Audio-Disco-PA-/360484078775?pt=UK_AudioTVElectronics_HomeAudioHiFi_Amplifiers&hash=item53ee8684b7

and run it off say +120 and -20V. The output devices are 200V so they should be OK. I would need to change capacitors and maybe some of the other transistors to work on the higher voltage but this would be a cheap solution if it works.
 
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.