Electrical contacts in relay systems comprise switching contacts that make and break electrical connections to carry and isolate load currents. An ideal contact would have a highly conductive metal surface without oxidation for a large contact area, and open contacts with infinite dielectric strength. However, actual relay contacts involve design compromises. Contact resistance is influenced by factors like electrical current, temperature, mechanics, and environment. It has contributions from constriction resistance due to a small contact area, and layer resistance from nonconductive surface films. These layers can be destroyed by mechanical wiping of contact surfaces or electrical effects like fritting and heating from current. Contact resistance is measured using voltage drop across closed contacts.
Electrical contacts in relay systems comprise switching contacts that make and break electrical connections to carry and isolate load currents. An ideal contact would have a highly conductive metal surface without oxidation for a large contact area, and open contacts with infinite dielectric strength. However, actual relay contacts involve design compromises. Contact resistance is influenced by factors like electrical current, temperature, mechanics, and environment. It has contributions from constriction resistance due to a small contact area, and layer resistance from nonconductive surface films. These layers can be destroyed by mechanical wiping of contact surfaces or electrical effects like fritting and heating from current. Contact resistance is measured using voltage drop across closed contacts.
The word "contact" not only describes the conductive connection of two mechanically separate electrical conductors, but also the conductive parts (contacts) even if they are not touching. Contacts comprise: non switching contacts as in connectors being opened only for service or installation (e.g. screw connections) sliding contacts plug contacts to carry but not to switch current switching contacts as in relays, contactors and switchgear Relay contacts are physically separate but switchable electric conductors designed to make an electrical connection, carry the load current, break the circuit and electrically isolate the load from the supply. How well the contact system actually performs is dependant on the suitability of the contact material, the contact arrangement and the mechanical design. An ideal relay contact would consist of highly conductive metal with chemically clean surfaces (no oxidation) and a large, wear resistant, effective contact area. Open contacts would ideally have infinite dielectric strength for electrical isolation. Unfortunately, actual relay contacts do not have these characteristics. An optimal contact material with high conductivity, resistance to oxidation or chemical reactions and resistance against wear and thermal influences during switching can only be a compromise. Design and cost clearly limits parameters such as the size of contact area, contact forces, relay sensitivity, and the need for big contact gaps for high dielectric strength. Typical and most basic influences on electrical contacts and their respective effects are shown in the following table. fig 4.1ContactSystem POWER RELAYS 14 INFLUENCE ON ELECTRICAL CONTACTS Influences Parameters Effect electrical current voltage heating, melting, material migration, chemical reactions, fritting, electrical discharge, contact resistance thermal arc melting of contact material, material migration mechanical friction pressure deformation, wear, cold welding, contact resistance ambient conditions dust gases increased wear, particles, formation of chemical layers and corrosion chemical oxidation contact resistance, inorganic and organic layers, corrosion INFLUENCE ON SWITCHING CONTACTS DEPENDING ON LOAD RANGE Load range Main influences Contact material Considerations dry circuit <100mV, <10mA low level switching <1V, <10mA mechanical chemical gold plated materials contact resistance, sealed relays, wipe movement, twin contacts, outgas free and wear resistant plastic material intermediate level <15V, <300mA mechanical chemical electrical AgNi 0.15 AgNi 10 (AgSnO2) (AgCdO) sealed relays, fritting, material transfer, contact resistance, outgassing power contacts 10-400V, 300mA-30A electrical chemical AgNi 0.15 AgNi 10 AgSnO2 AgCdO electrical life, contact welding, electrical wear, high temperatures, isolation properties, corrosion for sealed relays CONTACT SYSTEM 15 4.2 Contact resistance The contact resistance is the electrical resistance the current has to overcome when passing through a pair of closed contacts. Whereas ideal contacts would not show any resistance, real contacts do. The resistance is the sum of partial resistances due to physically different effects: R contact =R constriction +R layer R contact contact resistance R constriction constriction resistance R layer layer resistance Constriction resistance is the increase of resistance for metallically clean contacts due to the constriction of the electrical current when being forced through a small, effective contact area. The contacts do not touch over the entire apparent contact area but in fact, due to the roughness, touch only on a few relatively small points. Increasing contact pressure can enlarge the effective contact area by elastic and plastic deformation of the micro contact spikes on the surface. The larger the effective contact area and the contact pressure, the lower the constriction resistance. Layer resistance is the contact resistance of metallically clean surfaces and is extremely small, typically several m. Absolutely clean metallic surfaces do not exist in practice because the contact surface is covered by thin layers with low conductivity, semiconductor properties or even isolating characteristics. contact resistance RC constrictionresistance RE filmresistance RF macromolecular layer R~ A~ *(H/f) E M M / 1/2 R~ *d A F F / nmrange oxygen mrange oxide, sulphide organic vapour R=R+R C E F Contact Resistance S051 fig 4.2ContactResistance contamination current constriction contact b contact a contact surface Contact Points S087 fig 4.3ContactPoints POWER RELAYS 16 These layers of oxides, sulphides and other compounds will be formed on the surface of metals by absorption of gas molecules from the ambient atmosphere within a very short time. The growth of these layers will be slowed down and eventually stopped as the layer itself prevents further chemical reaction. The thickness of the layers and the speed of growth are dependent on the contact material, ambient atmosphere, temperature and time. Very thin layers cause little increase in resistance due to the tunnel-effect. The resistance of thicker layers depends on the depth of the layer, effective contact area and the specific resistance of the contact material/layer. To get a reliable electric contact these layers have to be destroyed. This can be done by mechanical or electro-thermal destruction. Apart from different layers or films, other contaminants may be on the surface of the contacts, increasing the resistance or even preventing electrical contact. These contaminants may be atmospheric dust or particles created by wear of the moving parts within the relay such as plastics and fibres. Other contaminants can be the result of outgassing of the plastic materials within the relay or generated by catalytic effect, through decomposition of organic vapours under the influence of arc, silicon sediments, oil or grease. Mechanical cleaning When the contacts are closing, the metal surfaces will collide and hit against each other several times (bouncing), causing elastic deformation of the effective contact area and mechanical destruction of the thin layers. The same effect can be obtained by applying high contact pressure to cause micro deformations on the contact surface destroying the insulating film. Furthermore, the design of most relays allows the contact surfaces to wipe across each other destroying the non conductive films on the contact surfaces. This contact wipe is often enough to clean the surface and reduce resistance to an acceptable level, as well as keeping the resistance stable throughout the electrical life of the relay. Electrical cleaning The low and non conductive layers can also be destroyed by the effects of: a) electrical voltage (fritting) b) current (heating of contact points) c) thermal effects (high temperatures due to the electrical arc) Contact Wipe initial position after relative movement S001 fig 4.4ContactWipe CONTACT SYSTEM 17 a) Fritting If the layers have not been mechanically destroyed by the closing of the contacts, or if the contacts have been closed for a long period of time without conducting sufficient current, the electrical effect of fritting will contribute towards establishing a metallic contact, despite layers on the effective contact area. The term fritting describes the electrical breakdown of the oxide/foreign layer when a sufficiently high voltage (fritting voltage) is applied across a closed contact. Due to the applied voltage and the very short distance (the thickness of the layers) between the two potentials an extremely high electric field is generated. The low conductive layer will break down and a small current (a few nA) is forced through very thin channels in the layer. The resulting local high current density, heats the conducting channels up quickly, destroying the layers, until finally (within a few ms) a metal to metal bridge is established, electrically linking the two surfaces. The value of fritting voltage depends on the contact material, composition and thickness of the layers, conductivity and composition of the contact surface. Voltages in the range of only a few volts up to some hundreds of volts may be necessary for fritting to occur. b) High currents High continuous currents and increased contact resistance due to the layers causes heating of the contact. The layers will eventually be destroyed thermally and a larger effective contact area is created, reducing the constriction resistance. Therefore, higher contact current may considerably reduce contact resistance. c) Arc, sparks Under certain circumstances an electric spark or arc will be generated during contact making (bounce) or contact breaking under load. The extremely high temperatures of these arcs may destroy the contact layers and burn or disintegrate other contaminants or particles in the vicinity of the point of contact. fig 4.5ContactFritting POWER RELAYS 18 Measurement of contact resistance Contact resistance is measured between the terminals of the relay using the voltage drop method as indicated in fig 4.6. The conduction resistance of the contact spring is included in the measured value of contact resistance. To achieve realistic test results, care has to be taken that the values of test voltage and test current in the measurement circuit correspond to either the actual load conditions, or be selected according to the minimum contact rating of the relay contacts. As described above, the contact resistance will vary with different test parameters, the variation and mean values decreasing with increasing contact current. This explains the necessity to state the testing voltage and current when indicating the contact resistance and why evaluation tests of contact resistance should always be conducted at voltage and current values reflecting the actual application. The importance of low contact resistance for applications is very often over emphasized and too much value placed on specifications and unrepresentative test results. For applications with high voltages/currents, an initially high contact resistance will not pose problems as it will quickly be reduced by the electrical cleaning effects of fritting and thermal destruction of layers, bringing the contact resistance back to the mOhm range. As a result, practically the full voltage is available at the load. U R I V A B Contact current Contact voltagedrop Load Supplyvoltage A,Brelayterminals Contact Resistance Measurement/Test S003 fig 4.6ResistanceTest Rated contact current (A) Minimum test current (mA) 0.01 - 0.1 0.1 - <1 >1 10 100 1000 fig 4.7ContactResistance CONTACT SYSTEM 19 For low level applications, the effect of contact resistance can usually be ignored if the load resistance is much higher than the contact resistance. In this case the full signal voltage will be available at the load (e.g. fig 4.8). Dry circuits, low level switching The term dry circuit describes applications with extremely low loads (e.g. LED's) or circuits which are switched with the electrical load having been previously disconnected, e.g. by electronic means. In these cases the current is too low to establish an electro- thermal cleaning effect and the voltage is below the fritting voltage. The non conductive oxide layers on the contact surface will not therefore, be electrically destroyed. The only remaining cleaning effect is the mechanical destruction of the layers which is sometimes insufficient (e.g. low switching frequency) to give a reliable contact or to keep the contact resistance within specification limits. The correct choice of contact materials is critical in such cases for reliability. Adverse ambient effects on contact resistance Some resistive layers are caused by gases found in the atmosphere such as sulphides, chlorides, nitrogen oxide, ammonia, benzene, stylene, etc. emitted from cars and paints. Particles and dust may cause an increase of contact resistance and reliability problems. These effects can be reduced and a more stable contact resistance obtained if the appropriate type of sealing of the relay is specified i.e. dust seal, plastic seal or hermetic seal. Contact resistance changes with time As described above, the contact resistance increases with the formation of layers on the contact surface. The thickness and the speed of growth depends on contact material, ambient atmosphere and temperature. This is fig 4.8VoltageDrop fig 4.9ContactReistance POWER RELAYS 20 especially important when the contact resistance is tested after a prolonged period of storage. The testing procedure has to provide both types of cleaning effect: mechanical cleaning by switching the relay several times electrical cleaning by using the appropriate test voltages/currents. 4.3 Electric arc - switching An electric arc is a current intensive gas discharge which occurs when opening a switch or as a result of a flashover (spark). Under certain circumstances the air path between the two contacts is ionized. Atoms are broken up into ions by thermal effect and/or by the effect of a high electric field. Ionization causes the normally non conducting air to become conductive and its conductivity is maintained if sufficient energy is supplied. The arc represents an additional resistive current path in the load circuit (see fig 4.10). The minimum voltage and current for the generation and maintenance of a stable electrical arc depends on the contact material and the length of the air path (distance between the contacts). Due to the extremely high temperatures of the arc - between 6000C and 10000C - the surface of the contacts will melt. Evaporation or sputtering of the contact material leads to wear and material migration, reducing the service life of the contacts. As a side effect of evaporation of the contact material, the insulation resistance of plastic material in the vicinity of the contacts may be degraded as conductive contact material will condense or be sputtered on the insulating plastic parts. U R I Contact current Load Supplyvoltage RARC ARC Electric Arc S006 fig 4.10ElectricArc fig 4.11ElectricArc CONTACT SYSTEM 21 Material migration from the cathode to anode can cause rapid contact wear. The resulting formation of craters and cones on the contact surfaces eventually leads to failure due to the mechanical interlocking of contacts and the reduced contact gap. This material migration effect can be ignored when switching ac circuits, as due to the change in polarity, contacts are statistically as often anode as cathode. Electrical arcing does not only occur when loads are switched off, but are also generated when the contacts are closed for the following reasons: As the contacts are closing, the decreasing contact distance leads to a strong electrical field resulting in a spark discharge and an electric arc. This arc may, however, help to electrically clean the contact surfaces. After impact of the contacts the kinetic energy leads to bouncing. The contacts will rebound and slightly open several times. This bouncing may be regarded as a switching process. While bouncing, even though the contacts are separated for a short time, the normally high inrush currents maintain an arc between the contact surfaces. Excessive heating at the contact points can melt the surface and, in extreme cases, lead to welding. Arc in DC circuits Switching resistive loads In dc circuits it is generally during contact breaking that arcs occur. When breaking, the contacts move further apart and, as the gap between the contacts increases, the minimum voltage to maintain an arc normally rises above the source voltage and the arc is extinguished. If, however, the supply voltage/current is sufficiently high enough to maintain a stable arc across the open contacts, the relay will be destroyed as it cannot withstand the prolonged high temperatures generated by the arc. Switching inductive loads In inductive circuits, the emf (energy L*I 2 /2 stored in the inductance) is a secondary energy source which causes the arc to be maintained until the energy in the circuit has been converted to heat. This leads to considerably longer arc durations. To prevent destruction of the contacts and to keep the arc duration within limits, the switching voltage/current has to be within the maximum DC breaking capacity. This data is given for each relay type. Material Migration anode cathode S008 fig 4.12Material Migration POWER RELAYS 22 Arc in AC circuits In AC circuits the supply helps to extinguish the arc as it will collapse when the current becomes too low or reaches zero (every 10ms for 50Hz supply). The arc may however be re-established if the supply voltage is above the maximum switching voltage for the particular relay or if the contacts at the current zero-crossing are not completely opened. In this case the air gap is still relatively small and the electric field may be strong enough to cause electrical breakdown, especially with surge voltages associated with inductive loads. The arc may also be re-established if the high temperature generated by the previous arc allows re-ionization of the air path. After a few cycles however, the contact gap will be sufficiently large and the energy in the circuit too weak to re-ignite the arc. In order to limit the negative effects of the arc and to extend contact life, it is necessary to extinguish the arc as quickly as possible. This can be done by relay design or by using certain electric arc suppression circuits. Design The primary design factors influencing arcing are the length of the air gap between the contacts and their opening speed. The wider the contact gap the better the arc extinguishing properties as more energy (voltage/current) would be necessary to maintain (DC) or re-ignite (AC) the arc (see fig 4.11). Design limits for a relay often mean it is not possible to provide a sufficiently large air gap to elongate the arc. However, in order to increase the maximum breaking capacity the contacts of a multi-pole relay may be connected in series, leading to more than one arc and hence giving a longer total arc length and better arc extinguishing properties. Electric circuits Contact protection circuits reduce the duration of electrical arcs and can significantly increase the service life of the relay and suppress electrical noise. This is especially important when switching inductive loads. For arc suppression circuits see chapter 4.5.3. U R I Load Supplyvoltage 41 31 21 11 44 34 24 14 arc 4 arc 3 arc 2 arc 1 Contacts in Series S009 fig 4.13ContactsinSeries CONTACT SYSTEM 23 Despite the extremely high temperatures and other adverse effects resulting from arcing, the electric arc also has some advantages such as the electrical cleaning effect and surge limitation. Electrical cleaning The high temperature created by the arc clean the contact surfaces by destroying (burning, decomposing) chemical layers and other non conductive contaminants in the vicinity of the actual contact point. Also, existing small particles may eventually be burnt away. As a result, this cleaning effect keeps the contact resistance stable and therefore has a positive effect on relay reliability. Surge voltage peaks - The electrical arc can be considered as an additional resistor in the load circuit (see fig 4.10). This helps to limit the surge voltages when switching inductive loads. 4.4 Electric loads Electric loads can be classified according to: Type of load/ supply Resistive loads Voltage and current are directly dependent variables, Ohms law U=R*I applies at all times, regardless of DC or AC supply. ELECTRIC LOADS the electrical type of load resistive capacitive inductive type of supply DC AC level of load low level intermediate high level typical load characteristics inrush current switching current, e.g. lamp loads, motors, solenoids, etc. POWER RELAYS 24 Inductive loads The load inductance has an inertia effect on the current. Inductive loads always have a resistive component (coil resistance etc.). Once DC voltage is applied the current is I=U/R(1-e -t/T ) T=R/L, being the time constant, given in ms. For an AC supply the current lags the voltage, expressed as phase shift angle or power factor cos. The higher the time constant or lower the power factor, the higher the inductivity. When inductive loads are switched off, the energy stored in the inductance generates high surge voltages. Typical inductive loads are electromagnetic components such as coils, transformers, motors, solenoids, contactors, other relays, etc. fig 4.14InductiveDC Load fig 4.15AC-Loads CONTACT SYSTEM 25 Capacitive loads If DC voltage is applied to a combined capacitive/resistive load the current is I=U/Re -t/T the time constant T=RC in ms. For an AC supply the stable state current leads voltage. When capacitive loads are switched on, the resulting peak current can be extremely high if the circuit resistance is low (see inrush current). Load level The load currents usually applied to power relay contacts extend from a few A up to 30A or higher. With regard to thermal contact effects and arc phenomena, loads can be classified as: Dry circuits Voltage <80mV, current <10mA, no electrical cleaning effect Low level circuits Voltage 80mV to <300mV, current <10mA, practically no electrical cleaning effect. Relays for these loads range from micro relays to small PCB relays for signal switching. The most important consideration in this load range is contact resistance and contact reliability. Intermediate level Voltage 300mV to <10V, current <300mA, short arcing will occur and the electrical cleaning effect helps keep contact resistance low. There is a wide variety of applications in this load range, such as household appliances, air conditioners, audio devices and business machines. fig 4.16CapacitiveDC Load fig 4.17LoadLevels POWER RELAYS 26 Heavy loads Voltage >10V , current >300mA. For these loads, stable arcs, contact erosion and material migration are predominant features. Minimum, maximum load The minimum contact load (current/voltage) influences the choice of contact material which should be selected to maintain a stable contact resistance over the electrical life of the relay. If there is no electrical cleaning effect, the contact material has to be chosen according to its resistance to oxidation and other chemical reactions to minimize contact resistance (e.g. gold plated contacts). Another selection criteria is the relay design e.g. the mechanical cleaning characteristics of the contacts (high relative movement, wipe, twin contacts). The limits for maximum contact load are determined by the: switching capacity of the relay for inrush currents and when breaking the load circuit contact material needed to obtain a reasonable electrical life contact design to withstand inrush currents and resistance against contact welding design of the contact system for conducting high currents, while taking into account heating of contacts and contact springs ambient temperature Typical load characteristics Inrush currents for some loads can be significantly higher than the steady state current or the currents given in the specification of the equipment. Typical examples are: Incandescent lamps For incandescent lamps the inrush current may be 10-15 times the steady (rated) current. This is due to the increase of the load resistance with the temperature rise of the filament. The steady state current is given for hot filament, for cold wire the resistance is much lower. For halogen lamps the inrush current can be as much as 20 times the steady state current. The inrush current for sodium vapour lamps is approximately 1-3 times and for mercury lamps approximately 3 times the rated lamp current. Incandescent lamp I/I =10-15 I N Motor load I/I =10-50 I N Solenoid load I/I =(3)-10-20 I N Capacitive load I /I =20-40 (-100) I N Halogene lamp I/I =10-20 I N Load Characteristics S013 fig 4.18LoadCharacteristics CONTACT SYSTEM 27 The same effect of high inrush currents due to low initial component temperature exists for other resistive loads such as heaters. The temperature difference between cold and hot heating elements is not as big for incandescent lamps and therefore the difference in resistance is smaller. Fluorescent lamps The inrush current is typically 5-10 times the steady state current. Depending on the capacitive effect of the power correction circuit however, the inrush currents may be considerably higher. Motor loads When a motor starts, there is no EMF as the rotor is standing still. The inrush current for the acceleration phase can be 5-10 times the rated current. Solenoids, contactors Unenergized solenoids have a low inductance due to the big air gap in their magnetic system. The inrush current can be 10-20 times the steady state current measured in the pulled in position. The same applies to other electromechanical loads such as contactor coils. Load categories AC-x, DC-x EN 60947-1 and VDE 0660 describe the typical electrical load of applications and respective test characteristics (inrush current, T or cos for switching on, switching current and T cos for switching off). The defined categories are as in fig 4.19 and fig 4.20. UTILIZATION CATEGORY according to VDE0660 Category Typical applications AC-1 non-inductive or slightlyinductive loads, resistance furnaces AC-2 slip-ring motors: starting, plugging AC-3 squirrel-cage motors: starting, switching, off during running AC-4 squirrel-cage motors: starting, plugging, inching AC-5 different incandescent lamp loads AC-11 AC electromagnets AC-14 low electromagnetic loads AC-15 AC electromagnetic loads AC-20 switching without load AC-21 resistive load with overload AC-22 resistive-inductive load with overload AC-23 motor loads and other heavyinductive loads fig 4.19UtilizationCategory UTILIZATION CATEGORY according to VDE0660 Category Typical applications DC-1 non-inductive or slightlyinductive loads, resistance furnaces DC-2 shunt motors: starting, switching off during running DC-3 shunt motors: starting, plugging, inching DC-4 series motors: starting, switching off during running DC-5 series motors: starting, plugging, inching DC-13 DC electromagnets DC-14 electromagnetic loads with shunts DC-20 switching without load DC-21 resistive load with overload DC-22 resistive-inductive load with overload DC-23 motor loads and other heavyinductive loads fig 4.20UtilizationCategory POWER RELAYS 28 Motor categories according UL508 Test loads representing motor loads are specified in UL508 according to the horsepower rating, inrush current, switching current and power factor. These are specified for overload and endurance tests. Loads for TV rating according UL For television, radio and other household equipment, relays are tested for high inrush current resistance. 4.5 Contact - functions In this chapter the four switching states of a relay contact are examined in detail. These are: closing of the contact or switching the load ON, closed contacts or conducting the load current, opening the contacts or switching the electrical load OFF open contacts or maintaining isolation properties across the contact gap. To discuss these states in relation to the control voltage applied to the coil, the N/O contact of a monostable relay is considered as the sample contact. Contact voltage, switching current The switching voltage is the voltage between the contacts before making or after breaking. The switching current is the current which a relay contact carries immediately after making and before breaking. 4.5.1 CLOSING CONTACTS - SWITCHING ON The relay being an electromechanical component takes time to react electrically as well as mechanically to an input on the primary side (coil). Due to the inductivity of the coil, the coil current lags the input signal and has to build up the coil operating current necessary to move the armature. This response time is the electrical pull-in time. The mechanical parts then have to be accelerated to get to the other switching position, giving an additional mechanical component to the pull-in time. fig 4.21ClosingContacts CONTACT SYSTEM 29 Bouncing When the moving contact arrives at the fixed contact, part of its kinetic energy will cause elastic deformation and the contact will rebound several times. This period is the relay bounce time. Although bouncing has an advantageous mechanical cleaning effect, there are negative effects such as wear due to arcing. If preventative measures are not taken, pulse triggered control circuits or circuits acting as counters can receive false input information because of multiple closures of the contacts. Electrical effects on closing contacts When power switching, closure of the contacts and subsequent bouncing creates an electrical discharge. Every bounce of the contact is like one switching operation. The high inrush currents usually present tend to generate an arc, leading to high temperatures on the contact surface, contact erosion, material transfer and even contact welding as the molten surface areas are forced together. Depending on the application the contact wear during switching ON can be as high or considerably higher than for switching OFF. This has an important impact on the electrical life of the relay. On the other hand, the discharge and subsequent high temperatures during power switching have a cleaning effect on the contact surface. Layers of oxides, sulphides and other contaminants which cause high contact resistance are burnt away or disintegrated, keeping the contact resistance low. At a sufficiently high contact voltage, fritting will take place generating a highly conductive metallic contact between the two contact surfaces. Inrush current As previously described, arcing combined with contact bouncing is one of the parameters that limits inrush current. The maximum make or inrush current for a relay is the maximum current that can be applied for a four second period immediately after contact closure. This parameter is specified for a duty cycle of 10%. Care has to be taken during the design and test phase of an application to ensure that the peak inrush current will not exceed the relay specification. Inrush currents can be extremely high compared to the rated current of the load to be switched. Typical current vs. time diagrams for different typical electrical loads are shown in fig 4.18. Dry switching, low level switching For dry circuits and low level contact voltages up to 100mV and contact currents of less than 10mA, no electrical discharge in the form of an arc will occur. Nor will fritting take place. Therefore there is no electrical cleaning effect. POWER RELAYS 30 The destruction of the layers on the contact surfaces can only be achieved by the mechanical effects of contact bouncing and relative movement. Contact materials with high resistance to the building up of oxide layers have to be selected (e.g. gold plated contacts). If typical contact materials for power switching are used in such applications (e.g. AgCdO), the resultant increase in contact resistance can cause reliability problems (see contact resistance). Contact material - required properties The choice of contact materials has a great impact on a relay's characteristics during the switching ON process and the maximum inrush current capability. The properties required by contact material for this switching phase are: elasticity/softness to absorb kinetic energy to reduce bouncing high thermal conductivity to maintain a low temperature at the contact surface high melting temperature to avoid material migration, evaporation, sputtering and welding 4.5.2 CLOSED CONTACTS - CONDUCTING During the time when the contacts are closed only thermo-electric effects have to be considered. The load current heats the contact point due to the contact resistance. The heat generating power is P=I 2 *R contact . For high load currents, the heat generated will be sufficient to either destroy low conductive layers or to heat the contact point beyond the softening temperature leading to a larger effective contact area. Both effects will reduce the contact resistance, leading to a reduction of heat generation which in turn will result in a stable thermal situation. The maximum ambient temperature for a relay is given assuming full load current on all relay poles. This full load will also heat the coil system by approximately 10K. Maximum thermal current This is the maximum load current that can be permanently applied without being switched. If load currents exceeding the maximum thermal current are applied for too long, damage due to excessive temperature within the relay will result. These thermal effects can lead to contact welding if the contact is heated beyond its melting temperature, or fig 4.22ContactResistance CONTACT SYSTEM 31 degradation of the mechanical properties of contact springs. In addition, plastic parts like actuators or the relay base may deform as a result of being in direct contact with the overheated metal parts. I 2 t, short-circuit protection Relay contacts will withstand limited overcurrents of very short duration (current peaks) without welding. This is due to the fact that it takes time to heat the thermal mass of the contact, and the contact points, to the melting temperature. However, there is an absolute maximum current, above which tack welding will occur. Therefore, two values have to be considered for short duration overcurrents without switching. In applications or for the design of short-circuit protection (see switching characteristic of a melting fuse fig 4.23) both limits have to be satisfied. I 2 t-value -As the heating power applied to the contacts is P=I 2 *R, the energy limit can be expressed as the square of the current multiplied by the duration of the pulse; e.g. 500A for 5ms give an I 2 t-value of 500 2 *5*10 -3 =1250A 2 sec. Absolute maximum current in A These maximum values range from 20000A 2 sec/500A for industrial power relays to 1000A 2 sec/200A for PCB-relays. When considering continuous high currents or electrical overload, heat dissipation via the relay terminals is of great importance and care has to be taken in the design of connections and selection of terminal type. The minimum specified PCB conductor widths and wire cross section must be adhered to. Contact material, required properties The properties required by contact material for the conducting state are: high melting temperature to prevent welding low specific resistance fig 4.23OperationArea POWER RELAYS 32 4.5.3 OPENING CONTACTS - SWITCHING OFF When the coil power is switched off, the armature will drop out and the contacts will open. The inductivity of the coil and certain circuits (flywheel diodes) causes an electrical time delay. The necessary acceleration of the moving masses add to this delay. The release time decreases with lower coil inductance, lower mass of moving parts, greater restoring force (spring) and shorter actuator travel but increases for flywheel circuits. Release time is measured from switching the coil energization off to the opening of the contacts for N/O contacts, to contact closing for N/C and C/O versions. Before the contacts open, contact pressure decreases to zero and vibration leads to a bouncing effect on the opening contacts. Electrical arc When the contact surfaces separate, the high electrical field (short contact gap) and the load current will generate an arc. Depending on the switching current/voltage and the contact opening characteristics the arc will be maintained for a certain time (see chapter 4.3). Effects of arcing Extremely high temperatures within the arc area causes melting and consequently contact wear, material migration, evaporation and sputtering of contact material, together with a reduction of insulation properties which may finally lead to relay failure. Switching of high DC loads causes material transfer from the cathode to the anode. Uneven contact surfaces develop, forming a pip and a crater. Eventually such contacts may mechanically lock as if they were welded (see fig 4.12). The positive effect of the switching arc is the electrical cleaning of contact surfaces by burning away or disintegrating layers or other contaminants, and limiting extreme surge voltage when switching inductive loads. fig 4.24OpeningContacts CONTACT SYSTEM 33 Rated/ maximum breaking capacity for AC circuits The rated breaking capacity is the product of rated switching current and rated switching voltage. The maximum breaking capacity can be higher than the rated breaking capacity especially in the case of a short circuit or system failure. The relay may not be damaged by exceeding the rated breaking capacity in this way but, of course, no electrical life can be guaranteed under these conditions. The maximum breaking voltage is the maximum voltage the relay contacts can switch. For voltages above the maximum switching voltage the arc may either re-ignite or not extinguish at all. This voltage should not be exceeded especially when using multi-pole relays as a flash-over might occur between adjacent poles and destroy the relay. (see 4.9 multi-pole relays). Arc extinguishing Arc extinguishing for AC circuits The arc is extinguished when the external power source (power supply, energy in inductance, etc.) cannot supply sufficient energy in the form of current/voltage for ionization to occur. The energy necessary to maintain a stable arc is a function of current, voltage and length of air path. For AC loads, the arc will extinguish when the current passes through zero. In some instances (small contact gap, timing, applied voltage above the dielectric strength) the air between the contact surfaces may be re-ionized and the arc re-ignited. For high frequency AC (appr. >1000Hz) the tendency for the arc to re-ignite is very high. This gives a switching characteristic similar to DC switching (long duration arcs and the DC limitations of maximum DC breaking capacity have to be considered). POWER RELAYS 34 Arc extinguishing for DC circuits DC circuits, unlike AC circuits, do not have the advantage of self extinguishing arcs as there is no zero crossing of the current every half cycle. Depending on switching voltage, current and load characteristics, the arc may be stable for an extended period or not extinguish at all. The DC breaking capacity indicates the maximum switching current and voltage for a resistive or inductive load for the arc to be extinguished within 10 milliseconds (10 ms has been chosen as maximum possible arcing time when switching resistive AC loads at 50Hz). Above this limit, it cannot be certain that the arc is extinguished. Switching conditions at, or near the maximum breaking capacity will reduce electrical life drastically due to the duration of the arc. Arcs can be extinguished more easily by increasing the air path between the contacts. As the relay design sets limits to the contact gap, this longer air path may be achieved by connecting the contacts of a multi-pole relay in series. Contact protection circuits, arc suppression To increase electrical life it is necessary to reduce the negative effects of the arc as far as possible by suppressing or quickly extinguishing the arc. This can be achieved using contact protection circuits, also called arc suppression circuits. The basic function of these protection circuits is to take some of the switching energy out of the arc, or the switching process itself (e.g. by RC circuits across the contacts). Flywheel circuits allow the inductivity to maintain a load current via the diode. The switching characteristics of the contacts in this case are similar to a resistive load. The use of protection circuits is especially important when the relay is used to switch inductive AC and DC loads as the back EMF needs to be suppressed to a low level. Although inductive DC loads are more difficult to switch than resistive loads (see maximum breaking capacity), the use of a proper arc suppression circuit can make the switching characteristics similar to that of resistive loads. Contact protection circuits not only protect the contacts, but are often also necessary to protect other electronic components in the circuit or to limit other interference and comply with EMC standards. fig 4.25DC BreakingCapacity CONTACT SYSTEM 35 Protective circuits do, however, have disadvantages. The most obvious is the initial cost of adding the protection components. This cost however may be recouped by being able to use a relay with a lower current rating and/or by obtaining a longer electrical life. There are several methods of protecting the relay contacts. The most suitable for a given application will depend on the supply (AC or DC) and the characteristics of the load to be switched. For every application a suitable circuit has to be selected. An optimum solution can often only be found by examining the waveforms on an oscilloscope and by comparative life cycle testing. The most commonly used circuits and information regarding their characteristics are given below. Diode circuit (for DC circuits only) This is the most commonly used method of arc suppression. suitable for all loads, low cost, easy mounting, effective, no surge peaks very long reaction delay, i.e. release delay for loads such as relays, magnets, contactors etc. The reverse breakdown voltage of the diode should be at least 10 times the nominal circuit voltage and the forward current equal or greater than that of the load current. Zener diode circuit (for AC and DC circuits) This is an effective circuit when the release delay in a diode circuit is too long. shorter delay than for diode circuit, well defined voltage level in the circuit, independent of supply polarity less effective than diode circuit, expensive, not suitable for heavy loads The breakdown voltage of the zener diode has to be higher than the power supply voltage. Diode and zener diode circuit (for DC circuits only) Advantages and disadvantages as above Varistor circuit (for AC and DC circuits) Similar to the zener diode circuit, the varistor prevents excessively high emf surge voltages. low overvoltage levels, short delay, independent of polarity, can be used at relatively high voltages Diodecircuit Zener diode circuit RC circuit Varistor circuit RL RL RL RL L L L L D C RV Protection Circuits S072 fig 4.26ProtectionCircuits POWER RELAYS 36 low arc suppression properties, no significant extension of contact life, not suitable for all loads RC circuits across the contacts (for AC and DC circuits) For this contact protection, an RC circuit is connected in parallel to the relay contacts. When the relay contacts open, the capacitor suppresses the arc discharge. The series resistor limits the current when the contacts close again. no delay, good arc extinction properties no suppression but reduction of surge peaks, additional contact load because of higher inrush current The required values for R and C may be taken from fig 4.28. The voltage U refers to the actual overvoltage produced during the switching process, which can be measured using an oscilloscope. The current has to be calculated from this voltage and from the known resistance, across which the voltage was measured. If RC circuits in parallel to the contacts are used with an AC supply, special care has to be taken with regard to the effect of leakage current across the RC circuit. For high impedance loads and electronic circuits this leakage current may cause problems. Protection circuits shown in fig 4.27.a have to be avoided due to extreme inrush currents and the probability of contact welding. Combination of RC circuit and diodes (for DC circuits only) This combination is often used if highly inductive currents have to be switched and a diode alone is not sufficient to suppress the switching arc. the arc can be almost completely extinguished and the electrical life increased by up to a factor of 10 delay (diode), large capacitors necessary Combination of RC circuit and zener diodes (for AC and DC circuits) as for RC and diode, independent of supply polarity C circuit RC diode circuit C circuit RC circuit RL RL RL RL L L L L C RV C C RV C D Protection Circuits S083 fig 4.27ProtectionCircuits CONTACT SYSTEM 37 RC circuits parallel to the load (for AC and DC circuits) The RC circuit mounted directly at the load reduces surge peaks. short delays expensive for higher loads To begin with R and C values can be calculated using: C=0.5..1F per A load current R=0.5..1 per Volt contact voltage or R=0.5..1 times load resistance The optimum values should be established by experiment and the effect checked with the actual load parameters using an oscilloscope. The protection circuit shown in fig 4.27 may be very effective at suppressing arcs but extreme inrush currents during contact closure render this solution impractical due to contact welding. Reduction of arc duration by connecting two contacts in series This method is not a contact protection circuit as such. However, connected in this way the maximum breaking capacity and the electrical life of a multi-pole relay with a DC load can be increased. The duration of the arc will be reduced significantly, but the arc energy remains the same leaving surge peaks and material migration unchanged. Therefore the result is not as effective as an RC circuit or diode. EMC considerations Electromagnetic compatibilit of equipment is a further consideration. Whereas relays do not pose any problem as to susceptibility to external interference (immunity), the topic of emission or electromagnetic disturbance needs further deliberation. An electromagnetic disturbance is defined by law as "any electromagnetic phenomenon which may degrade the performance of a device, unit of equipment or system". All frequencies and all forms of interferences are involved. The EU Directive covers all electric, electrical and electronic appliances, equipment and installations containing electrical and/or electronic components. As relays are just components, they do not fall within the scope of the EU Directive, but any equipment using relays will. fig 4.28RC Protection POWER RELAYS 38 Emission from the relay contacts during switching may cause problems depending on the type of load switched and to some extent on the relay design. In particular, the switching arc and voltage spikes due to back EMF are likely to cause emissions. These factors are generally beyond the control of the relay manufacturer. Where emission problems occur, a contact protection circuit should be used to reduce or eliminate the effects of arcing and/or back EMF spikes. An optimum arc suppression circuit, however, does not necessarily eliminate all EMC emission problems. Equipment testing will be necessary to guarantee compliance with the directives and standards. Switching frequency, NO x generation (corrosion) When switching at a high frequency rate and with high arc intensity, abnormal corrosion may occur. NO x will be generated which will react with other substances (e.g. water vapour) under the influence of the electrical arc, eventually forming nitric acid which may form a blue-green corrosive deposit. To reduce this effect, the vent tab of sealed relays should be opened when switching at a high frequency. This phenomenon also has to be considered when carrying out accelerated contact life testing of relays under high load conditions. 4.5.4 OPEN CONTACTS - ISOLATION Once the arc is extinguished and the air path loses its conductivity, the air between the contacts resumes its function as an insulator. Dielectric strength Dielectric strength is the effective voltage insulation can withstand without electrical discharge or breakdown. For an air gap this limit is dependent on the distance between the contacts and other parameters such as atmospheric pressure, humidity, contact shape and temperature. CONTACT SYSTEM 39 Tests for dielectric strength are conducted with either: a specified AC voltage applied to the respective terminals for 1 minute, the maximum leak current is 5mA; the test condition is given in catalogues as e.g. 1000VAC 1min. an impulse voltage as specified in IEC-255-5 with a wave form as shown in fig 4.30, T f =1.2sec, T t =50sec. Other wave forms may be specified. Dielectric strength can also be measured between other terminal points, for instance, the maximum breakdown voltage between adjacent poles of a relay (especially important when using different voltage levels on adjacent poles) or between the contact system and the coil terminals (primary side). 4.6 Contact material Contact material has a major influence on the performance of a relay affecting maximum inrush current, maximum switching current, contact resistance, etc. together with contact reliability and electrical life. The requirements fulfilled by a contact material are as numerous as the contact functions. Ideally the contact material should have the following properties: high electrical conductivity for low resistance high thermal conductivity to dissipate generated heat quickly high specific heat to withstand heating for long periods high melting temperature to prevent welding and excessive contact wear resistance to material migration (DC applications) high evaporation temperature to prevent sputtering and reduce arc re-ignition resistance to mechanical wear elasticity/softness to absorb kinetic energy and reduce bouncing fig 4.29BreakdownVoltage fig 4.30DielectricStrength POWER RELAYS 40 resistance to environmental influences such as gases, humidity and aggressive environments resistance to oxidation and corrosion When looking at these different technical requirements some contradictions become clear: physical properties cannot be combined, for example, electrical and thermal conductivity are proportional, so whereas good electrical conductors are soft and have a low melting temperature bad conductors have the opposite characteristics. Therefore, no single metal can combine all properties. Even alloys have the same principal characteristics as their constituent parts so by increasing resistance and hardness, the melting temperature could decrease, etc.. other contradictions also occur in application as the required material properties can be the complete opposite for different design objectives. For example, softness for short bounce time and hardness for mechanical resistance against wear. precious metals show less tendency to generate low conductive layers, however they are too expensive to be used commercially for most applications. highconductivity highinrushcurrent highswitching current high temperature resistance highmechanical resistance lowprice lowarcing tendency Contact Material Objectives S020 fig 4.31ContactMaterial CONTACT SYSTEM 41 These examples prove that an optimal contact material, fulfilling all technical requirements does not and cannot exist. This, however, does not prevent the wide use and application of relays. Different contact materials can be selected for respective applications, e.g. signal switching (prime objective: contact resistance) versus power switching (prime objective: electrical life). There is no known universal contact material which suits the entire range of high power applications. The choice primarily depends on the type of load (AC , DC, resistive, inductive, capacitive, lamp, etc.) and switching voltage and current. Other important factors include ambient atmosphere, switching frequency, etc., not forgetting the relay design itself. Contact size and air gap directly effect the electrical life and opening speed or available space in the contact area leads to different electrical life results. In practice, power relays are used in a variety of applications with different electrical loads and a wide range of voltage, current and power ratings. fig 4.33 shows an outline of voltage/current areas for common applications. MECHANICAL RESISTANCE + hardness + resistance against mechanical wear TEMPERATURE RESISTANCE + resistant to inrushcurrents + resistant to electrical wear CONDUCTIVITY + lowcontact resistance + short bouncing + high inrushcurrents + mech. destruction of layers + advantages in production processes + resistant against arc reignition + lowweldability + electrical destruction of layers + price Contact Material Properties S019 fig 4.32ContactMaterial fig 4.33ApplicationRange fig 4.34Rangeof Application POWER RELAYS 42 Characteristics of common contact materials Fine grain silver (AgNi0.15) This material is a general application material suitable for switching loads from 10mA to 10A with voltages >12V. It has high electrical and thermal conductivity and shows good resistance to oxidation. It does, however, easily develop a sulphide film drawn from the atmosphere so care is required in low voltage and low current applications. The addition of the 0.15% Ni to the silver gives the alloy a greater mechanical stability resulting in better resistance to contact wear and the reduced possibility of contact welding. Fine grain silver sometimes is supplied with a 0.3m gold flash Fine grain silver: universal material for low to medium contact loads with high currents there is a tendency for welding, material migration and wear at low loads resistance problems due to layers Silver cadmium oxide (AgCdO) AgCdO contacts have a greater resistance to wear and welding than fine grain silver, making them suitable for switching inductive or high current loads such as motor loads, heating resistors, lamp loads, solenoids etc. This is because the addition of cadmium oxide to the silver increases both the mechanical and thermal stability. Improved thermal stability gives the contacts their wear resistant properties and reduces the rate of material transfer when switching a DC load. The contact resistance for AgCdO is higher than that of fine or hard silver and sulphide films form easily. fig 4.35AgContacts fig 4.36AgCdO Contacts CONTACT SYSTEM 43 In application a minimum load of 100mA at 12V is recommended, but during relay testing these values should be exceeded. For resistive loads at mains voltage AgCdO shows better results than AgSnO 2 . AgCdO contacts: typical power relay contact material medium to heavy load switching high mechanical resistance high resistance against welding Silver Nickel (AgNi10) Silver Nickel 90/10 is a contact material with a wide range of applications in the range of >100mA up to power switching (e.g. 16A). In comparison with AgNi0.15 this material shows better resistance against contact wear and higher resistance to contact welding at high loads. The disadvantage is a slightly higher contact resistance. AgNi10 is suitable for medium to high contact loads. The most important uses are in DC switching, particularly in automotive applications where high inrush currents occur e.g. when switching lamps, window lift motors etc. Silver Nickel: universal material for medium to high contact loads higher resistance than AgNi0.15 high mechanical resistance high resistance against welding Hard silver (AgCu3) Hard silver is similar to fine grain silver being suitable for switching loads in the range 10mA to 10A at 12V or greater. Hard silver has, however, a greater mechanical strength than fine grain silver, making it less susceptible to welding and contact wear. This gives a greater contact life when switching high loads but with a higher contact resistance. An important criteria to be considered is the wiping movement necessary to destroy any surface film mechanically. fig 4.37AgNi10Contacts POWER RELAYS 44 Silver tin oxide (AgSnO 2 ) Although the general properties of AgSnO 2 are similar to those of AgCdO, there are some fundamental differences. AgSnO 2 has both a higher melting point and a higher thermal stability than AgCdO and therefore has a greater resistance to micro-welding. Additionally, the contact erosion rate is lower because any arc spreads to the outside of the contact, preventing creation of a local hot spot and potential weld. Owing to the higher thermal stability, contact material transfer is only marginal and contact life is greatly increased. AgSnO 2 contacts exhibit a more uniform contact wear pattern and the lower tendency for material migration limits the build up of cones and craters giving a higher electrical life in DC applications. AgSnO 2 is particularly suited to applications involving high inrush currents or inductive DC loads. AgSnO 2 contacts: suitable for applications where there is a high inrush current such as fluorescent light loads, tungsten and tungsten halogen lamps, capacitive and motor loads. DC applications higher thermal stability than AgCdO greater resistance to micro-welding more mobile arc and therefore less contact erosion improved electrical life when switching DC loads fig 4.38AgSnO Contacts CONTACT SYSTEM 45 Other contact materials CONTACT MATERIALS Contact material Typical properties Typical applications Range of applications Fine Gold Best corrosion resistance, but rarely used as a pure metal (too soft). Danger of cold welding Gold plating of 1m thickness as storage protection. Economical contact protection in sulphuric atmosphere, with 2..3m thickness (minimum) Hard Gold AuNi1 AuCo1 Very good corrosion resistance, low and stable contact resistance, for very small contact loads Dry circuits, use in sulphuric atmosphere (min 2..3m) V..60V A..0.2A Gold-Silver AuAg10 Lowest contact resistance (stable even with smallest loads) Dry circuits, measuring circuits V..60V A..0.2A Gold-Nickel AuNi5 Free from material transfer within a wide range of loads; small contact resistance; easy arcing; friction oxidation is possible in case of small breaking capacity, high number of operations and big contact overtravel; very expensive For medium current and voltage levels 100mV.. ..60V 1mA..0.3A Silver- Palladium AgPd30 Better tarnishing resistance than with Ag, greater hardness, low contact wear, expensive; stable contact resistance Signal circuits with medium loads 1V 1mA..1A Tungsten W Highest melting point, high wear resistance with heavy loads, little transfer of material Circuits having highest making and breaking requirements 60V 1A POWER RELAYS 46 Plated contacts Gold plated contacts Used for signal switching, low level and dry circuits, gold has an excellent resistance against chemical reactions and formation of films. However, it is very soft and has a low resistance to mechanical wear. The low melting temperature may lead to increased electrical wear and welding. The softness of gold can result in cold welding under certain circumstances, when the relay is ultrasonically cleaned, for example. A compromise between the cost and benefits of gold plated contacts is the use of a 1-2m gold plate which is thick enough to completely cover the surface (without any microscopic holes which might cause corrosion) but thin enough to give the same switching characteristics as a thicker plating at low loads. At higher loads the plating will be burnt away, the switching characteristics then being determined by the underlying contact material. Gold flashed contacts Often, fine grain silver contacts are coated with a 0.3m gold flash which protects the surface, reducing the effect of corrosion, thereby increasing shelf life of the contacts. Gold flashed contacts do not give the same contact characteristics as gold plated contacts. The thin coating will be quickly worn away by mechanical wear, or evaporated by electrical switching. Gold flashing does not effect the switching characteristics of the base material. fig 4.39Au-platedContacts fig 4.40Au-platedContacts CONTACT SYSTEM 47 Contact design As contact material is expensive, contacts are usually made of copper with a layer of contact material (e.g. AgCdO) on the contact face. The thickness of the layer is sufficient to withstand electrical wear during the specified life of the relay. In some special applications where extreme arcing and contact erosion is expected, the entire contact rivet may be made from the contact material. Multi-layered contacts have been designed in the search for a "universal contact". Materials highly resistant to wear are covered with other contact metals with less resistance to electrical erosion and low contact resistance. If such contacts are used in low power applications, the top layer gives the advantage of having a low and stable contact resistance. In the case of high power switching the top layers will quickly be burnt away, exposing the highly arc resistant material below. However, such multi-layer contacts are not widely used in power relays. The reason is that extensive sputtering of the soft surface material can reduce the insulation properties of plastic parts near the contacts. Furthermore, this erosion effect is irreversible. Once used for switching high loads, the advantage of low contact resistance for low loads is gone. For the relatively large contacts used in power relays, the cost of multi-layer contacts is considerable. Riveted/ welded contacts: Another aspect of contact design depends on manufacturing methods, and to a lower extent, the application. Two production methods for contact assembly are widely used: riveting the contact to its carrier or welding the contact material to the contact spring. Both techniques are accepted but riveted contacts suit the requirements of a power relay better. This is due mainly to their higher electrical and thermal conductivity together with the ease of guaranteeing a good connection when using thin contact carriers. Welded contacts are mainly used in signal relays. Welded contact rivetedcontact Contact Design Weldedandrivetedcontacts contact material contact material welding points contact spring Curivet C/O contact S026 fig 4.41ContactDesign POWER RELAYS 48 4.7 Contact configuration Contact configurations available in power relays are defined in terms of: number of poles contact function types of contacts Number of poles indicates the number of electrically independent, but mechanically linked, contact sets in the relay, e.g. a three pole relay can switch three separate electrical circuits or loads. fig 4.42 shows the schematic of a 2- and 4-pole relay. Contact function Contact configurations and design of contact groups are defined according to their function and based on DIN 41020 and by NARM, where the various combinations have been given form letter symbols. The most common contact configurations are: N/ O - normally open contact is a contact which is open in the non energized position of the relay and will be closed after coil energization. Also called form A, or make contact N/ C - normally closed contact is a contact being closed in the non energized relay position and opens when energized, breaking the circuit. Also called form B or break contact. C/ O - change over contact is the contact configuration comprising both make and break contacts, electrically connected. Also called form C contact or double throw. This contact form has three terminals. (1) 12 (2) 22 (3) 32 (4) 42 (5) 14 (6) 24 (7) 34 (8) 44 (9) 11 (10) 21 (11) 31 (12) 41 (13) A1 (14) A2 (1) 12 (4) 42 (5) 14 (8) 44 (9) 11 (12) 41 (13) A1 (14) A2 2-pole relay 4-pole relay Multi-pole Configuration S048 fig 4.42Multi-poleConfiguration Contact Configuration Designation D GB USA Symbol Make contact Normallyopen 1 A SPST-NO contact Break contact Normallyclosed 2 B SPST-NC contact Changeover contact 21 C SPDT Twin make SPST-NO contact (11) U DM S027 fig 4.43ContactConfiguration CONTACT SYSTEM 49 Double make/ double break contact has both a make and a break contact but in this case there is no electrical connection between the make and break contacts. This version has four terminals. The different mechanical characteristics of the relay (magnetic system and contact spring system) leads to different electrical parameters of N/O and N/C contacts. In general, due to the higher contact pressure of the N/O contact, parameters such as the electrical life, mechanical cleaning effect and inrush current can be higher, while bounce time and contact resistance are lower compared to the N/C contact. Contact assembly designations Abbreviations used to define the contact assembly and exact nature of the contacts are as follows: number of poles SP single pole DP double pole nature of contact pole ST single throw DT double throw Single throw relays have two contacts configured as either one normally open or one normally closed contact set. Double throw relays have three contacts configured as a changeover contact set. normal position of contacts for an unenergized relay coil N/O normally open N/C normally closed function B break M make DB double break DM double make Terminal designation Terminal identification is specified according to DIN EN 50005 The terminals of switching contacts are designated with a two digit code. The first digit indicates the number of poles concerned, the second digit specifies the switching function i.e. 1 change over contact 2 normally closed contact 4 normally open contact For example, terminal 22 denotes the normally closed contact of pole number 2. Coil terminals are designated A1, A2, etc. for 1-coil and 2-coil magnetic systems. POWER RELAYS 50 Terminal designationsof octal type plug-in relays are defined according to IEC 67, DIN 41556. The system consists of consecutive numbers to indicate the terminal. For modern octal plug-in relays both numbering systems are indicated on the case. Types of contact Contacts used in power relays are one of two types, single or twin. Single contacts are contact sets with one contact rivet per contact spring and are preferred when switching high currents. Twin contacts (or bifurcated contacts) are contacts with two contact tips per contact spring. Both tips operate in parallel, are electrically connected, and switch simultaneously. The main advantage of using bifurcated contacts over single contacts is a substantial increase in contact reliability, particularly when switching low level or signal currents. The mathematical probability of a good contact being established when two parallel contacts are used rather than one is higher. In practice it has been found that the failure probability is reduced by a factor of between 4 and 25, compared to a single contact. These figures should only be used as a guide, the actual reliability will depend on many application parameters. N/C N/O C/O .2 .4 .4 .2 .1 .1 .1 2-pole relay 11 21 12 22 14 24 Terminal Designation S028 fig 4.44Terminal Designation fig 4.45Terminal Designation CONTACT SYSTEM 51 Another advantage of bifurcated contacts is increased vibration resistance. The effect of lower individual contact mass and higher resonance frequencies can increase the vibration resistance from 4g to 10g, for instance. The actual figures will depend upon the relay type. Bounce time is also reduced by the use of twin contacts because of lower contact mass and the fact that the two contacts do not close at exactly same time and electrically overlap. This can be important when using the relay to switch solid state inputs. The major disadvantage when using twin contacts is the reduction in breaking capacity. The reason for this is that the smaller contacts on the bifurcated version have a lower thermal capacity. This reduction in switching capacity can be considerable (e.g. 2000VA for single compared to 500VA for twin contacts). Data should be checked with catalogues and data books. Safety contacts/ safety relays Safety relays have a multi-pole design but prevent simultaneous closing of any N/O or N/C contacts, even in the event of malfunction due to contact welding. In the case of a malfunction, a minimum contact gap of 0.5mm has to be guaranteed. These relays are designed according to different standards (e.g. EN60204, IEC 204, VDE0113 etc.) and are used in control systems of equipment where malfunction could cause personal injury or considerable damage. 4.8 Contact reliability/ life Reliability is the measure of a products' ability to fulfil its intended function for a defined period of time. For relays, reliability is expressed in terms of the number of switching operations. If reliability of systems containing several of the same type of relays is to be determined, it is calculated by the number of relays*switching operations. Reliability criteria depends on the application of the relay. For medium and higher contact loads, electrical service life is usually applied as the evaluation criteria while for low loads the principal requirement is usually for consistency of contact resistance. In all instances the ambient and operating conditions are crucial. In defining reliability expectations for a product, the fitness for use must also be taken into account. Only if the fig 4.46ContactType POWER RELAYS 52 product, application and requirement profile are matched as closely as possible, can one be assured that operation will take place with the minimum of problems. Parameters for electrical life Quality of electrical contact should be considered with regard to contact reliability. Contact failure modes might include high or unstable contact resistance due to layers, isolating films on the contact surfaces or other contaminants like micro-particles or dust. Probability of failure The occurrence of failures in the life of a component can be described in probability terms i.e. in the form of a Gaussian function. The probability of a failure occurring at a certain time is specified by its probability density function. For electrical life, the mean value X indicates the typical life. Some components will fail after and some before this value. The cumulative failure probability function is the integral of the probability density function and gives the percentage of failures, (i.e. the percentage of components which attained the end of their service life) as a function of time. The complete diagram for the probability density function and the cumulative failure probability is shown in fig 4.47. CONTACT FAILURE MODE Arc discharge Surface layer Particle contact welding contact erosion material transfer inorganic layer (oxide, sulphide) organic layer (oil, grease, vapour) abrasion (plastics) dust influence of contact material influence on contact resistance influence on contact reliability fig 4.47ProbabilityFunctions CONTACT SYSTEM 53 Bathtub curve Similar to other electrical and electronic components, the failure rate of relays over a number operations can be shown in a diagram. The expected failure rate is not constant over the entire period of use. Because of the shape of this curve it is called the bathtub curve. The bathtub curve can be divided into three phases: Phase 1: initial period, early failures. In this phase, contact reliability is the prime factor. Particles from the production process and transport and/or layers built up during storage, increase the probability of an early failure. When switching low power the chance is that, if contaminants exist, they will lead to faulty switching operations. When switching high power, the electrical cleaning effect will increase the quality of contact and the failure rate during the initial phase will be drastically reduced. Phase 2: random failures, service life - see contact reliability. During this phase the failure rate is constant and very low. Early failures have been eliminated and failures due to contact wear are still far away. Only random failures without any specific related cause will occur. Phase 3: wear failures - see electrical life When switching low power, the end of electrical life is generally due to contact wear. This takes a long time, and as a result, the bathtub curve deteriorates into a rather flat curve over operational life. Contact reliability during this period is the main cause for concern. Switching high power considerably reduces the problems of contact reliability (quality of the electrical contact) as the electrical cleaning effect reduces the influence of contaminant layers or particles. The contact failure rate for low and high power switching is shown in fig 4.49 and fig 4.50. fig 4.48Bath-tubCurve POWER RELAYS 54 Contact reliability Contact reliability can be improved by: increasing electrical cleaning, selection of the correct type of relay for the application (e.g. signal relay or power relay), correct circuit design taking into account switching voltage and current. twin contacts. Bifurcated contacts are designed to establish a good contact even in the case of a non conductive layer or an insulating particle being trapped between the contact surfaces. burn-in procedure. The object of this is to reduce the early failure rate in an application by applying a test procedure to fail relays showing poor contact reliability in the initial phase. reliability testing. In these tests, switching operations are continuously repeated under a specified load. Contact failure modes such as the increase in contact resistance and eventual contact welding are checked at each switching operation. fig 4.49Bath-tubCurve fig 4.50Bath-tubCurve fig 4.51Burn-in CONTACT SYSTEM 55 Characteristic values for reliability. is the failure rate and is given in number of failures per time or per number of operations. Failure rate is a parameter for the reliability of a product defined as the proportion of failures in a given number of operating products divided by the operating time. When indicating failure rates, the failure criteria, as well as the operating and ambient conditions, must be stipulated. MTTF Mean time to failure given in [time/failure] MCTF Mean cycles to failure in [operations/failure] =1/MTTF or 1/MCTF MTTF is the mean time until a failure occurs. It gives the mean life of a product for precisely defined operating conditions. The parameter MTTF is the reciprocal value of the failure rate and is given in terms of hours (h). MTTF values of differing products can only be compared when test or operating conditions are the same. Electrical life Electrical life is the number of operations for a given contact load under specified conditions before a permanent contact failure occurs. Without specified switching conditions (e.g. current/voltage, duty cycle, maximum switching rate, etc.) and the criteria for contact failure (e.g. contact welding, number of faulty operations, contact resistance above a specified value, etc.) the specification of electrical life cannot be determined. Statistically, electrical life can be seen in phase 3 of the bathtub curve. The end of service life is indicated by an increase of the failure probability with respect to the number of operations. This is due to: wear and burnout of relay contacts. welding of contacts Welding of contacts occurs at the instant of contact closure by an arc discharge simultaneously with contact bounce. reduction in contact force because of contact erosion mechanical locking Material migration caused by transfer of molten contact metal forming a crater and cone, eventually leading to a failure in contact opening. failure rate = 1/MTTF or 1/MCTF: = i/T(N*Ops) = failures/time = failures/operations*(relays*operations) i number of failures N number of relays Ops number of operations The failure rate is given either in failures/hour or failures/switching operation. For relays it is common to use "percent failures per 10.000 operations" [%/10 3 Ops] as unit, e.g. 1%/10 3 Ops is equivalent to 1 failure per 1 million operations. Example: N = 1.000 relays, i = 10 faulty relays, Ops = 10.000 operations = 10/1000*10.000 = 1/10 6 = 10 -6 =1ppm (1 failure per 10 6 switching operations) MCTF = 1/ = 1/10 -6 = 10 6 switching operations Assuming 100 operations per hour MTTF = MCTF/Ops/h = 10 6 /10 2 = 10 4 hours POWER RELAYS 56 reduced insulation The depositing of scattered contact metal and condensation of evaporated contact material on the surfaces of insulators, as well as thermal deterioration, can cause a reduction in their insulation properties such as insulation resistance and dielectric strength. According to IEC 255, the life of a component is considered to be reached if any of the insulation characteristics fall below 75% of the specified values. powder deposits on the contact surfaces caused by wear of plastic parts such as the contact actuator, oxide powders caused by rubbing motion of moving parts and those produced by erosion of contact metal. Carbide deposits produced by dissolution of organic gases absorbed by the contact surfaces. As with reliability, electrical life is a statistical approach to defining part of a relay's specification. This means that there is not one single value for electrical life, but a probability function of contact failure as a function of switching operations. The electrical life of a relay can be indicated in different ways. In terms of either statistical values B10, T and b (see Weibull diagram and fig 4.55) or as typical life. Typical life is the mean value of switching operations under a specified load. For relays, the typi - cal life represents the number of operations for which statistically approximately 50% of the relays will still be functional. fig 4.52Electrical life CONTACT SYSTEM 57 Electrical life for different loads AC loads In most catalogues, the electrical life for AC loads is given in the form of a diagram as in fig 4.53. These diagrams indicate the typical life - usually for N/O contacts and for unsealed relays either in respect of the breaking capacity in VA or the switching current in A. Both types of diagram are valid for one switching voltage only, usually, the nominal voltage (e.g. 250VAC). For loads with an identical breaking capacity, but a different switching voltage, the one with the lower switching current will result in a higher contact life. Switching inductive loads reduces contact life. The expected reduction is shown as a multiplication factor in fig 4.61 as a function of the power factor (cos). DC loads Because the major consideration is arc duration, which is dependent on the precise load and relay design, the electrical life cannot be indicated in the form of a diagram as for AC loads. Usually, the electrical life is given for some typical loads. The life for other loads is estimated by interpolation or by testing in the actual application. Contact life with DC loads is highest for pure resistive loads. For inductive loads, the larger the inductance (longer time constant L/R), the shorter the expected contact life. This may be partially compensated by contact protection circuits. fig 4.53ContactLife Example: for the nominal voltage of 220VAC and a breaking capacity of 1.1kVA (current 5A) the expected typical life for resistive load is 350.000 operations; under the assumption of an inductive load with a cos of 0.4 the expected typical life is -350.000*reduction factor 0.7 giving 245,000 operations. fig 4.54ReductionFactor POWER RELAYS 58 Weibull diagram Apart from the typical electrical life of a relay, it may also be defined by a cumulative failure probability. In order to process the probability distributions mathematically, and be able to convert the data to relatively simple graphs, the probability density function is approximated by functions such as Gauss' distribution, or in the case of relays and other components, by the Weibull distribution. The absolute failure probability for a specified contact load is approximated by a straight line in the Weibull diagram. The general formula for the probability distribution is: probability of survival is R=e -(t/n)b probability of a failure is defined by F=1-R. Three parameters B 10 , T and b represent the failure probability of the relay: Characteristic life T, indicates the point where statistically 63.2% of the relays will have failed. B 10 represents the number of operations for which statistically 90% of the relays will still work. Weibull exponent b, gives an indication of the degree of random failure. In the diagram, b is represented by the gradient of the Weibull line. For b<1 the failure rate diminishes as the number of operations increases, indicating that the failures are early failures. For b=1 the failure rate is constant (random failures) and for b>1 the failure rate increases with switching operations, indicating failure due to wear. fig 4.55Weibull Diagram CONTACT SYSTEM 59 The line will be relatively flat for random failures but for the end of electrical life the Weibull line will be very steep. In the theoretical case of a vertical line all relays would fail at exactly the same number of operations. The advantage of this method is that trends can be quickly recognized using relatively small sampling sizes, the failures giving a good indication of the reliability of the total batch. Of course, the electrical life diagram giving the typical life, and the Weibull diagram, are linked via the general reliability curves of failure rate and cumulative failure probability as indicated in fig 4.56. Sealed relays When switching a full load on the contacts at extremes of switching rate and ambient temperature, nitric acid may be produced as a result of the high energy arc discharge. To maintain specified performance the relay should be opened or vented. Usually, this can be accomplished by opening a vent hole after completion of any cleaning process. If the relay has to remain sealed during application because of a harsh ambient environment (gases, humidity, dust), and used at maximum current and switching frequency, the electrical life has to be derated. fig 4.56Electrical Life fig 4.57SealedRelays POWER RELAYS 60 4.9 Application advice Circuit layout AC-DC switching The switching capacity of a relay is lower for DC loads than for AC. Due to the lack of zero voltage crossing, the arc discharge lasts longer. There is also the contact material transfer phenomenon when switching DC loads which may cause contact locking. Therefore, if AC or DC switching can be chosen during the design stage, as shown in fig 4.58, AC switching should be chosen as it will lead to higher switching capacity and longer electrical life. Polarity switching The contact gap in relays with C/O contacts is rather small and the response time may be shorter than the arc extinction time. This means that the N/C contact could be closed before the arc to the N/O contact is extinguished. In this case the arc between the opening contacts will give an electrical connection to the closing contact. The N/C contact will be electrically connected to the N/O contact causing a short circuit. If the supply can supply enough energy to maintain a stable arc, welding and the complete destruction of the contact system will occur. Such circuits must be avoided under all circumstances! fig 4.58AC-DC Switching fig 4.59PolaritySwitching CONTACT SYSTEM 61 Motor reversing When reversing a motor by switching between two polarities, the arc between the opening contacts may short to the closing contacts, leading to a short-circuit of the power supply (see above). As there is practically no load in this circuit, the current will be strong enough to maintain the arc and burn the relay contact system. A motor reversing circuit using only C/O contacts must not be used. An additional relay should be used to first disconnect the motor from the power source, and only then the reversing relay switched after the arc has extinguished. Multi-pole relays When selecting relays and circuit design for switching multiple poles with different voltages/loads, special considerations are necessary. Loads and contacts should be connected with the same polarity and potential as shown in fig 4.61. If the loads are connected as No.2 in fig 4.61 there is a chance that under some load conditions (spikes, surge voltage) the dielectric strength between adjacent relay poles may not be sufficient, and an arc discharge may cause short circuits. This is especially important when switching loads at or near the maximum breaking voltage given per pole! The maximum voltage between the poles guaranteeing sufficient creepage and clearance distances is given by the voltage rating according to VDE0110. If switching different potentials within one relay is unavoidable, a type with sufficient dielectric strength has to be selected. Alternatively, a large gap between two fig 4.60MotorReversing fig 4.61Multi-poleWiring POWER RELAYS 62 adjacent contacts should be created by interposing an unused contact set between the sets of switching contacts. 3 phase switching The same considerations for multi-pole relays applies to the switching of a 3 phase power supply. Even if using the relay poles within their specified limits, maximum switching voltage and current per pole, the arc discharge and connected ionization during the switching procedure may lead to short-circuits between adjacent poles. In such cases, the resulting short circuit current may maintain a stable arc, destroying the contact system. When switching 3 phase supplies, relays with sufficient isolation characteristics have to be selected. For switching 3x380VAC, relays with an insulation category of C380 according to VDE0110 should be used. In certain cases, it may be possible to use relays with a B380 rating (depending on load conditions). When selecting a relay, choose one with a higher maximum breaking capacity as the insulation characteristics will degrade during the electrical life of the relay. Stronger contacts are less susceptible to wear and hence to these negative effects. Special attention has to be paid when switching 3 phase inductive loads such as motors. Back-EMF surge voltage peaks, generated during switching, may be higher than the dielectric strength between adjacent poles. The resulting breakdown of the insulation will lead to an arc, causing a short circuit between two phases, destroying the relay. Testing in the application is necessary to ensure safe design. Connecting contacts in parallel The switching capacity of a relay cannot be increased by connecting relay poles in parallel. The contacts will not switch simultaneously. Only one contact will switch the overload and be affected by the arc. The overload will increase contact wear or cause welding. Phase synchronization of AC loads If the switching of an AC load is synchronized with the AC phase, the polarity of the contacts during the switching procedure will always be the same, leading to material migration and the mechanical locking effect as for DC switching. Reduced electrical life will be the consequence. fig 4.623-PhaseSwitching CONTACT SYSTEM 63 Different contact loads in one relay Switching of two extremely different loads like high loads and micro current loads in one relay should be avoided. Contaminants generated by switching high power may be deposited on the contacts switching the low load and, as there is no electrical cleaning effect on these contacts, they increase the probability of contact failure, putting the reliability of the relay in question. Dummy resistor - electrical cleaning When switching low power and dry circuits there is no electrical cleaning effect, which may result in high contact resistance and reduced contact reliability. Apart from using bifurcated contacts and a suitable contact material, the electrical cleaning effect can be increased by adding a dummy resistor in parallel to the load, increasing the switching current. Contacts in series, DC switching Arcs may be extinguished by providing a longer air path between the contacts. This can be achieved by connecting the contacts of a multi-pole relay in series, thus multiplying the air gap by the number of poles. Contact protection circuits Contact protection circuits can increase the electrical life of the relay. The most widely used circuits are shown in chapter 4.5.3. U R I Load Supplyvoltage 41 31 21 11 44 34 24 14 arc 4 arc 3 arc 2 arc 1 Contacts in Series S009 fig 4.63ContactsinSeries POWER RELAYS 64 4.10 Selection of contact system - summary CONTACT SYSTEM PARAMETER CHARACTERISTIC SELECT CHECK contact configuration number of poles contact function N/O, N/C or C/O contacts type of contact single, twin contact load supply voltage -VAC, VDC type of load resistive, inductive, capacitive load current inrush current switching characteristics contact rating contact material contact resistance maximum contact voltage breaking capacity make current electrical life dielectric strength between open contact/poles