Magnus,
You are very much on the track that I was thinking. I belive you are absolutly correct
in that a 90 degree phase shift would be ideal.   

I did a bit more digging last night, and it turns out that an XOR phase comparator looking at the tank voltage and drive voltage may be ideal, as you have suggested here. My main concern was that I plan to adjust the pulse width of the push-pull the drive circuit to adjust the power into the tank circuit. (Actually the drive will be full bridge, transformer coupled to the tank). That change in pulse width is where I was stuck, mentall. However since I'm in the 10Khz to 100Khz range and am generating the push-pull PWM digitally, I can just generate a second output at the same frequency and phase (or even different phase) than the drive signal to compare to the tank voltage.  As you say "away you go with a phase
detector"! 

Didier,
I guess the thing that's different here than in most situations, is that normally you try not to load the tank circuit more than necessary. Here I'm loading the tank circuit considerablly, knowing that it will change frequency with the change in Q. This change in frequency is what I need to find, track, and follow. 

The tank will be very lossy (Maybe consuming 20Kw to 30Kw of power if all goes well). I'm also certian Q will move all over the place. I just want to stay near the peak of the bell, even if it's a short fat bell shaped curve. Since the frequecny is low, I was thinking that even a modern optocoupler should get me phase information well. At these power levels a little loading souldn't be a big deal! :) 

Dan

As you drive it with a pulse, you induce energy to it. If you sample the voltage (or current) 90 degrees of from your drive-pulse, that quadrature will indicate if you are early, late or prompt. As your sampling point is also a sign of your current rate, and the pulse forced the LC tank and your oscillator into sync, the frequency error will cause the phase difference and hence voltage difference to be observeable. As you are fairly close in frequency, so will the phase error and you can assume the phase to voltage to be almost linear and away you go with a phase detector. Cheers,
Magnus
------------------------------
Keep in mind that anything you connect across your tank circuit will affect its resonant frequency and Q (signal source and measuring device). You need to make sure your equipment is very loosely coupled to the UUT through small value capacitors for instance.

 Didier KO4BB


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