Sunday, June 20, 2010
Solar-Powered High Efficiency Battery Charger
The input voltage is supplied by twelve amorphous solar cells with a minimum surface area of 100 cm2. Returning to the circuit, potential divider R2/R3 disables the internal regulating loop by holding the V-FB (voltage feedback) terminal low, while divider R1/R2+R3 enables LBI (low battery input) to sense a decrease in the solar array output voltage. The resulting deviation from the solar cells’ peak output power causes LBO (low battery output) to pull SHDN (shutdown) low and consequently disable the chip. LBI then senses a rising input voltage, LBO goes high and the pulsating control maintains maximum power transfer to the NiCd cells.
Current limiting inside the MAX639 creates a ‘ceiling’ of 200mA for I out. Up to five NiCd cells may be connected in series to the charger output. When ‘on’ the regulator chip passes current from pin 6 to pin 5 through an internal switch representing a resistance of less than 1 ohm. Benefiting from the regulator’s low quiescent current (10 microamps typical) and high efficiency (85 %), the circuit can deliver four times more power than the single-diode configuration usually found in simple solar chargers. Coil L1 is a 100-µH suppressor choke rated for 600mA.
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