Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: Rectifier–inverter combination
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
Dielectric heating (also called radio-frequency heating) requires high-frequency alternating electric fields to heat insulating materials. Mains frequency (50/60 Hz) is too low, so power-electronic conversion is used to produce the required high-frequency AC.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
The most common approach is AC → DC → high-frequency AC. A controlled rectifier (or diode bridge with DC link) first produces DC. An inverter then synthesizes high-frequency AC to drive the dielectric heating electrodes. This two-stage 'rectifier–inverter' chain allows control of output frequency and power level independently from the grid frequency.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Verification / Alternative check:
Industrial RF heaters and induction heaters commonly use rectifier–inverter chains; an AC regulator alone cannot change frequency, and a chopper works on DC only (no HF AC generation).
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
(a) Chopper does not create AC. (b) Controlled rectifier alone gives DC output. (c) AC regulator only varies RMS at line frequency. (e) Cycloconverters are typically used for low-frequency outputs, not high-frequency dielectric heating.
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing dielectric heating (needs high frequency) with resistance heating (mains frequency is acceptable).
Final Answer:
Rectifier–inverter combination
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