Post you SMPS noise spectrum measurements

Here's a 24uH CMC (made fom an 82uH toroid choke) with a low-ESR 680uF after it. Peaking is minimal, and attenuation at the 65kHz switching spike is -44dB.

CMC24a.jpg


Looks good. So let's hook it up to the RPS30-15 and see if that is true. If it is, the switching spike should be down around -96dB with it.

RPS3015c.jpg


And it's not. It is still up around -84dB just like it is with normal (non-common mode) filters. These isn't ANY common mode cancellation going on.

So far the only CM configuration that has reduced the switching noise on ground is the 3.1uH CMC with 1000uF cap.
 
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Perhaps an alternative approach for DM attenuation, that may benefit CM as well, is to identify a poly cap with an impedance minima at the nominal switching frequency. Granted most cap datasheets indicate a poly cap would need to be a physically large part, with a large capacitance to get its Z minima down towards 100kHz. The lowest datasheet curve I quickly identified was about 350kHz for a 6u8 Wima MKP4, but their product range does go up to 68uF for 100Vdc.
 
@trobbins I see what you're getting at. There are no such noise sources coming from the mains or other equipment connected to it. I have three separate mains circuits at the bench, the computer is on one of them by itself (shared only with the room lighting.) I have a large iso xfmr I can use if needed but it rarely is. You can see the noise floor for this setup in the measurements, with 16 averages it's down around -124dBV. There's nothing wrong with this test setup, been using it for years. It's high-impedance circuits that occasionally present challenges, not low-Z ones like this.
 
I haven't, the live and neutral connections are marked on the RPS.

Something I want to look into later is the how well balanced the impedance of both sides of my homebrew CM chokes are. I noticed the PE-62912 data sheet specifies a 1% max imbalance. That's pretty tight for a cored inductor.
 
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I am even more convinced that these high-inductance CMC's are not suitable for SMPS output filters. The output impedance would be insane.
You're thinking about it the wrong way. The inductance is only high for currents that are common-mode, which is to say going in the same direction in both windings, which is not how current being supplied to the load normally flows. The inductance is low in differential mode, which is what the load sees. So, the output impedance is nowhere near as high as you would think from measuring the inductance of only one winding.

Even if the output impedance really was too high, just use a bigger capacitor. If the bigger capacitor reduces the effectiveness of the filter because it has too much ESL, then use multiple capacitors in parallel.

And it's not. It is still up around -84dB just like it is with normal (non-common mode) filters. These isn't ANY common mode cancellation going on.
Are you absolutely sure it's common mode noise? Try turning the power supply off and measuring the noise again. You can also try shorting an oscilloscope probe (just clip the ground lead to the tip so the ground wire forms a loop), and waving it around the area to see what radiated noise it picks up.
 
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I checked the inductance of both windings on the CMC's I've used thus far. The 3.1uH was the best matched, but the 24uH choke was the worst. So I tweaked turns and windings dress to get it within 0.1uH at 22uH. The result is a 4dB improvement. The switching noise peak came down from -84.7 to -88.7.

RPS3015d.jpg


So balance matters. But the difference is not huge.