... I bought an electrophoresis power supply ... able to deliver ... voltage ... up to 4000V. ...
...
It is not a lab power supply, and there is quite some ripple in the output. I measured voltage at 150 V, with about 2.76 VAC RMS ...
I would like to correct ripple ...
It
is a lab power supply, by definition, because it's intended for electrophoresis processes in a lab environment.
The manuals I found online are for users and don't dig into the engineering specs of this supply. I don't think it's fair to the supply to view the 2.76v RMS ripple (~1.8% of 150vdc) in terms of peak-to-peak volts (resulting in your 7.2%) when thinking about the regulation.
The 150vdc test point is also less than 4% of the full voltage output capability. It's unclear whether the supply will have the same 2.76v RMS ripple at the top of the voltage range... If it did, that would be vanishingly-low ripple. Food for thought.
If voltage is preset, once the output turns on, there is an overshoot. I measured 24V overshoot at 160V preset value, supply briefly went to 184V.
I would like to correct ... overshooting problem.
Why is the overshoot a problem?
With any bench power supply, the user should still have a power supply rail for the circuit under test with filter caps and series decoupling resistors. Amplifier stages need that filtering & decoupling to avoid feedback due to shared power supply impedance. And since you're going to build a power supply rail anyway in light of this, you should appropriately rate the filter cap voltage to allow for your power supply's overshoot (which really isn't that big anyway).
FWIW, guitar amps have similar "overshoot" but due to the fact power supply voltage will drop when the tubes pull current because of the series impedance of a guitar amp's power supply. So it's a standard practice to rate filter caps for the maximum possible supply voltage, rather than the operating voltage.
... I would like to correct ripple, and overshooting problem.
... Supply is rather complex, and you can see that from the pics
The little bit I can gather from online information is this supply is microprocessor-regulated. So unless you can establish with certainty that the <3v RMS ripple exceeds the design ripple for this supply (again, <1/1,000
th of full output voltage), there may not be a "problem to fix." And if there is a problem, it's not gonna be a simple part-swap.
It might be harder to find help on power supplies which aren't simpler linear-regulated supplies. I have a couple that are more complex than that, and I hope nothing major fails in them because they'll probably be beyond my ability to repair.