Electronic Design

  
Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?


[Ideas For Design]
"Unstable" Power Supply Simulates Solar Panel Behavior

Giovanni Romeo, Giuseppe Urbini  |   ED Online ID #20692  |   March 12, 2009


This power supply may seem a bit strange, since it’s not stable in voltage or in current. However, it simulates the behavior of a solar panel and can be very useful if you’re working with a solar-powered device on a rainy day.

A solar-panel circuit can be represented by a current generator and some diodes (Fig. 1a). The short-circuit current depends on the cell type and illumination. The open circuit voltage depends on the number of cells. A simple way to “boost” a generator while maintaining its I-V characteristic uses a pair of op amps (Fig. 1b). You can tune the values of A and B to obtain the desired output with the I-V shape of the reference generator.

The working simulator employs both these principles (Fig. 2). U1 acts as a current generator, and the constant current, flowing through a series of diodes (D1, D3, D5), is read at the shunt (R13). The diodes and the constant-current source constitute the reference generator (Fig. 1a, again). D2, D4, D6, and U2 perform temperature correction. U3 and Q1 comprise the output amplifier. Load current is read at the shunt, R14.

Both shunts (R13 and R14) work on the low side. This is not elegant, but since a solar panel is a floating device, the whole circuit must be powered with a floating voltage source, and the lowside shunts work perfectly. The circuit simulates the number of cells (open-circuit voltage) by changing the output gain by modifying R10’s value (A gain in Fig. 1b). R12 regulates the short-circuit current (IDC in Fig. 1a) by changing the B gain (Fig. 1b). Op amps aren’t critical, and many modern quad op amps can replace the old beloved LM741.

The circuit displays the power coupling conditions using LED D7. It lights green when the load is too weak, red when it’s too heavy, and orange when it approaches the maximum power transfer, indicating that the load is well coupled with the simulated panel. This is useful for quickly checking maximum power point tracking (MPPT) charge regulators.

The LED is operated by a couple of comparators (U4a and U4b), which look at the voltage of the series diodes. This is done after the thermal correction.


Reprints   Printer-Friendly  Email this Article  RSS    Font Size   What's This?


  • Network-On-Chip Tools Arrive for The Masses
  • Tackling System Design Challenges Through Early Verification
  • ESL Tools Take Center Stage As Designers Move Up
  • Parasitic Extraction Tool Targets Next-Generation Custom ICs
  • Synopsys Jumps Into ESL-Synthesis Pool
  • Verify Control Systems Before Committing To Hardware
  • You're Using How Many FPGAs?
  • Tool Up For The FPGA Blitz
    1) Build A Smart Battery Charger Using A Single-Transistor Circuit
    (180 views today)
    2) Hot Hands For Some Cool Rock: Motion Sensing Meets Audio Engineering
    (174 views today)
    3) GPS-Derived Grandmaster Clock Delivers Ultra-Precise Time And Frequency Sync
    (90 views today)
    4) What's All This Transimpedance Amplifier Stuff, Anyhow? (Part 1)
    (81 views today)
    5) Science Fiction Meets Science Fact In Today's Robot Research
    (75 views today)
    ALL TOP 20



    POST YOUR COMMENTS HERE
    Name:

    Email:
    Your Comments:

    Enter the text from the image below


    Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.

    Search Electronic Design
         
      
     
    Email Newsletter
    Sponsored By:
    The Find Power Products monthly newsletter brings you the most important new developments within the world of power design. The newsletter includes exerpts from industry leader Sam Davis's exclusive blog, as well as overviews of the latest new products.

    Enter Email to Subscribe
      
    Web Seminar
    Sponsored By:
    Title: Exploring How Good GUIs Drive Adoption in the Digital Power Management Space
    Speakers: Don Tuite Deepak Savadaatt
    Date: 10/24/07
    Register: 

    Electronic Design Europe Electronic Design China EEPN Power Electronics Auto Electronics Microwaves & RF
    Mobile Dev & Design Schematics Find Power Products Military Electronics EE Events Related Resources