L
Lars Torben Wilson
Hi all,
(Just reread and grasped the length of this--sorry. Not looking for
specific answers, just insights into things I am perhaps
misunderstanding--any pointers to good reading help.
)
Another problem from an experimenting noob.
I have a schematic for a simple solar-recharging garden light. This
thing uses a very simple blocking oscillator to power a bright white
LED (3.9V) from a 1.25V AA NiCad cell, and works wonderfully.
1N4004
.--------->|---------o--------------------.
| | |
| | |
o-----' _'_ |
| | .-------UUU-----o-----. |
| | | | | |
| | | 20-T-20 | | |
/+\ | .-. | | /+\
( ) | | | | | ( )
\-/ | | | 1K | | \-/
1V PV | | '-' | | | 1.25V NiCad
| | | |/ | |
| | '-------------| V -> |
| | | |> - |
| | |/ Q1 2N4401 | | 3.9V |
| '---| | | |
| |> | | |
| Q2 2N4401 | | | |
| | | | |
'-----------o---------------o-----o-------'
(created by AACircuit v1.28.6 beta 04/19/05 www.tech-chat.de)
Short description: Q1, the 1k resistor, and the inductor form a
blocking oscillator which pulses into the ~1.25V from the battery
into fairly high frequency ~3.5-4V pulses which are sufficient
to power a bright white LED. Q2 disables the oscillator when
the solar panel hits enough voltage. The 1N4004 prevents the
battery from discharging though the solar panel.
Full explanation from someone wiser than I:
http://www.cappels.org/dproj/ledpage/leddrv.htm#Solar_Powered_Garden_Light
As I said, it works great--at least, it powers the LED quite nicely
from the battery.
Here's the problem--as you see from the schematic, I only have a
1V/400mA solar panel. Sources I have read seem to indicate that you
want more voltage from the charging source than the battery can
provide in order to charge the battery. Obviously the above circuit
falls short of that goal.
Other things I have read indicate that amperage is also important, as
far as charging rate goes--charge at C/10 for a fairly safe long-term
charge etc. But it seems to me that the amperage won't mean much if
the voltage is insufficient to push it into the battery. Am I way off
track here? Can a good charge into a 1.25V NiCad be had from a 1V
400mA panel (in reasonable light)? Or should I look into getting a A)
higher-voltage, lower-current panel, or B) converting some of that
amperage into voltage?
That was the first question, in a very roundabout format.
The second question involves me having chosen B) above to work on. I
reasoned that I might be able to have the solar panel, instead of
simply disabling the oscillator when it hits a high enough voltage to
do so, reverse the connections and instead pump its output through the
oscillator into the battery.
Now, one problem has to do with my switching topology, but my question
about *that* will have to wait until I'm a little more familiar with
AACircuit. The real question I have is: will that even work for
charging a battery? As I understand it, the output from a blocking
oscillator is a series of very fast, very short pulses. However, it
looks fine (solid DC line) on my scope. My scope may well be too slow
to show it, though (EICO 460 (pawn shop special)). But my DVM shows
around 4V when the solar panel has enough source light to power the
LED.
Am I mad? Yes, I am testing this but I have a shady yard in
Vancouver--which is pretty cloudy these days. It seems 4V should be
plenty to charge the battery, if I can work out the switching--if the
pulsing doesn't affect the charging.
So am I barking up the wrong tree here? Will the tiny pulses from the
oscillator (which I have read about but not personally observed) not
provide enough average power to charge the battery? Or is the
DVM--which I think gives an average DC voltage reading--showing me
what the battery would be seeing--enough to charge it well?
Thanks for any insight,
Torben
(Just reread and grasped the length of this--sorry. Not looking for
specific answers, just insights into things I am perhaps
misunderstanding--any pointers to good reading help.
Another problem from an experimenting noob.
I have a schematic for a simple solar-recharging garden light. This
thing uses a very simple blocking oscillator to power a bright white
LED (3.9V) from a 1.25V AA NiCad cell, and works wonderfully.
1N4004
.--------->|---------o--------------------.
| | |
| | |
o-----' _'_ |
| | .-------UUU-----o-----. |
| | | | | |
| | | 20-T-20 | | |
/+\ | .-. | | /+\
( ) | | | | | ( )
\-/ | | | 1K | | \-/
1V PV | | '-' | | | 1.25V NiCad
| | | |/ | |
| | '-------------| V -> |
| | | |> - |
| | |/ Q1 2N4401 | | 3.9V |
| '---| | | |
| |> | | |
| Q2 2N4401 | | | |
| | | | |
'-----------o---------------o-----o-------'
(created by AACircuit v1.28.6 beta 04/19/05 www.tech-chat.de)
Short description: Q1, the 1k resistor, and the inductor form a
blocking oscillator which pulses into the ~1.25V from the battery
into fairly high frequency ~3.5-4V pulses which are sufficient
to power a bright white LED. Q2 disables the oscillator when
the solar panel hits enough voltage. The 1N4004 prevents the
battery from discharging though the solar panel.
Full explanation from someone wiser than I:
http://www.cappels.org/dproj/ledpage/leddrv.htm#Solar_Powered_Garden_Light
As I said, it works great--at least, it powers the LED quite nicely
from the battery.
Here's the problem--as you see from the schematic, I only have a
1V/400mA solar panel. Sources I have read seem to indicate that you
want more voltage from the charging source than the battery can
provide in order to charge the battery. Obviously the above circuit
falls short of that goal.
Other things I have read indicate that amperage is also important, as
far as charging rate goes--charge at C/10 for a fairly safe long-term
charge etc. But it seems to me that the amperage won't mean much if
the voltage is insufficient to push it into the battery. Am I way off
track here? Can a good charge into a 1.25V NiCad be had from a 1V
400mA panel (in reasonable light)? Or should I look into getting a A)
higher-voltage, lower-current panel, or B) converting some of that
amperage into voltage?
That was the first question, in a very roundabout format.
The second question involves me having chosen B) above to work on. I
reasoned that I might be able to have the solar panel, instead of
simply disabling the oscillator when it hits a high enough voltage to
do so, reverse the connections and instead pump its output through the
oscillator into the battery.
Now, one problem has to do with my switching topology, but my question
about *that* will have to wait until I'm a little more familiar with
AACircuit. The real question I have is: will that even work for
charging a battery? As I understand it, the output from a blocking
oscillator is a series of very fast, very short pulses. However, it
looks fine (solid DC line) on my scope. My scope may well be too slow
to show it, though (EICO 460 (pawn shop special)). But my DVM shows
around 4V when the solar panel has enough source light to power the
LED.
Am I mad? Yes, I am testing this but I have a shady yard in
Vancouver--which is pretty cloudy these days. It seems 4V should be
plenty to charge the battery, if I can work out the switching--if the
pulsing doesn't affect the charging.
So am I barking up the wrong tree here? Will the tiny pulses from the
oscillator (which I have read about but not personally observed) not
provide enough average power to charge the battery? Or is the
DVM--which I think gives an average DC voltage reading--showing me
what the battery would be seeing--enough to charge it well?
Thanks for any insight,
Torben