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Electric Load FAQs: What is an Electric Load?


Electronic loads are versatile instruments that are used in a wide variety of applications, but their operation is often misunderstood. Below are some of the most frequently-asked questions that get asked about electronic loads.

What is an electronic load?

An electronic load is an instrument that sinks power, using transistors to simulate ohmic resistance when testing DC voltage and current sources, such as batteries, power supplies, capacitors, or turbines. Typically, users will set the value of the resistance that they want to simulate (constant resistance mode) or the amount of current that they want to sink (constant current mode). In constant resistance (CR) mode, the amount of current that the load sinks changes as the voltage applied changes. In constant current (CC) mode, the resistance presented to the source changes in order to keep the load current constant.

Some electronic loads also let you set the input power, instead of just the input current or resistance. In constant-power (CP) mode, the user first sets the input current or resistance value, then the power value, and the load will regulate the input power, using the formula P = V x I. As a result:

  • The set points determine the control mode of the electronic load (CC, CP, CR, CV). Once the input current reaches the constant current set point, the load changes to constant current mode. Once the constant power set point is reached, the load changes to constant power mode.
  • Only one of the four regulation modes can be in control. CP has the highest priority, followed by CC, CR, and CV in that order.
  • CV (constant voltage) is a special case because the load is an energy sink, and can only sink a limited amount of power. The power source, or voltage source, connected to the load, usually holds its output voltage constant. When the load is in CV mode, the load will sink no current if the voltage set point is higher than the voltage coming from the voltage source. If the voltage set point is lower than the output voltage of the source, the load will try to bring the input voltage down to the adjusted level by sinking so much current from the voltage source that the voltage drops. This can only work if the voltage source can not provide more current than the load can drain. A battery, for example, can provide a high current, but will discharge over the time and the battery voltage will drop, eventually dropping below the electronic load’s voltage set point. In CV mode, the load would then stop discharging the battery. If the voltage set point is set too low, the battery could be discharged too deeply and be damaged.

What is the minimum input voltage for an electronic load?

In some situations where the voltage applied to the load is very low, the load cannot perform at full capacity. The reason for this is that an electronic load uses transistors to simulate an ohmic resistance, and for technical reasons, this resistance can never be 0. It is very small, but not—or only roughly—determinable. For example, when the input voltage is low, less than 0.5V, for example, and the load has input voltage rating of 80 V and an input power rating of 2400 W, the load will not be able to “draw” the full current.

Each model has a certain minimum input voltage at which the load can draw the full current. These minimum input voltages are different for each model and can be easily determined by setting the load to draw the maximum current, then applying a variable voltage source to the input. Slowly increase the voltage of the voltage source from 0V until the load draws the maximum current. The displayed input voltage value is then the minimum voltage for the load. The load will operate normally and reliably at input voltages below this minimum voltage, but is unable to draw full current or be set to a correspondingly low resistance.

How accurate are the voltage, current, resistance and power set points?

The voltage, current, resistance, and power set points are not 100% accurate. What this means is that if someone measured the actual values with highly accurate instruments, they would see small differences between the set point values and the actual values. One reason for this is the accuracy of the electronic load’s measurement circuits.

In constant current mode, for example, the load measures the input current and adjusts the effective input resistance to try to keep the input current constant. The accuracy of the current measurement determines how close the set point the input current will actually be.

In constant power operation, the electronic load measures both the input voltage and the input current to determine how much power it is sinking and adjusts the input resistance accordingly. As a result, both voltage and current measurement errors affect how close to the set point the input power will actually be.

Achieving an accurate constant resistance also relies on the voltage and current measurements, but is more problematic. The user sets the constant resistance value, and the electronic load calculates the current that it must draw based on the input voltage. When the input voltage is high, and the current set point is low, the calculated current value could exceed the current set point or the maximum current rating of the load. In either case, the load will not be able to accurately simulate the desired resistance.

When the input voltage is very low and the resistance set point is high, the current that the load must draw will be very small. In this case, current measurement errors could cause the actual current to be quite different than the current required to accurately simulate the desired resistance.

To maintain accuracy in constant resistance more, avoid set points near the top and bottom of the current and voltage ranges. By selecting values between 10% and 90% of full-scale value, the electronic load will accurately provide a constant resistance.

ea psi9000 bench power supply

EA Elektro-Automatik programmable electronic loads use both analog and digital technology, and because the designs are modular, they can offer a wide variety of products to meet the needs of nearly any industrial or R&D application. Some EA programmable electronic loads, such as the ELR 10000 Series are “regenerative” loads. Regenerative loads return more than 90% of the energy they sink to the utility, dramatically reducing power consumption and thereby saving costs.

To learn more about our regenerative loads, please visit our website on electronic loads. If you would like to inquire about this product or similar ones, please Contact Us for more information about how these products may apply to your application.