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Using the MOC3010 In a light dimmer circuit application

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jwhitmore:
I'm not sure I understand things well enough to formulate a decent question, but here goes...

I'm trying to make a Mains AC light dimmer circuit using the MOC3010 [1]. I decided that there might be some inductance in the lights so I opted for the example circuit in figure 12 of that datasheet [1]. I used a BTA16 as the TRIAC [2]

I did forget to put a current limiting resistor between my micro-controller and the MOC3010, but I'd have thought that the dimmer part of the circuit should still function. At present sending a square wave to the MOC3010 doesn't dim the light/load at all. The datasheet [1] does have both a high side switch arrangement (Figure 13) and the low side switch (figure 12). Should I have used the high side switch example?

I should maybe say that I have a zero crossing circuit using a H11AA1 chip, so my micro-controller is detecting the zero crossing but I'm not using a full bridge rectifier in the circuit at all. I didn't think I needed it as the light bulbs are AC bulbs anyhow. I've a small module which converts the Mains AC down to 5V DC to supply the micro-controller and that's all there is. I've been sitting on this for a week trying to find some clue as to why the circuit in the datasheet doesn't function, perhaps I have to wrong TRIAC chip?

On that thought it is a 'logic level' TRIAC so possibly I should not be using the MOC3010, but rather a simple opto-coupler with the BTA16 and forget the MOC3010. Aragh is that it I've put two devices together which don't match up?

[1] http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/2287694.pdf
[2] http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/1699992.pdf

Andy Watson:
Could you provide a circuit/schematic of what you have made?


--- Quote from: jwhitmore on January 19, 2020, 11:44:53 am ---I did forget to put a current limiting resistor between my micro-controller and the MOC3010,

--- End quote ---

So there's a chance that either the micro or the MOC, or both are damaged ? Can you test the operation of the micro's output? Can you test the LED in MOC ? - it should "bleep out" like any other LED would with DMM.


--- Quote --- At present sending a square wave to the MOC3010 doesn't dim the light/load at all.

--- End quote ---

Do you mean the light is on and does not get any darker, or that the light is off and doesn't get any brighter?

wraper:

--- Quote ---At present sending a square wave to the MOC3010 doesn't dim the light/load at all.
--- End quote ---
Does it stay ON all of the time even without triggering signal or does it not switch ON? What is your mains voltage? If it's 230V MOC3010 will fail to work properly.

--- Quote ---Should I have used the high side switch example?
--- End quote ---
Does not matter.

--- Quote ---I should maybe say that I have a zero crossing circuit using a H11AA1 chip
--- End quote ---
Did you actually check zero cross and output signals with oscilloscope?

Andy Watson:
If you have followed fig 12 on the datasheet, have you allowed for the fact that the MOC will be activated by the output of the micro being LOW? I.e. the signal sense is inverted.

Yansi:
Also note that MOC3010 is only suitable for 115V mains applications. Not suitable for 230-240V mains.

(good to note, as you do not have a flag displayed in your profile)

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