Sujet : Re: power supply discharge
De : jl (at) *nospam* glen--canyon.com (john larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 27. Sep 2024, 18:00:20
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <peodfjtqn9q207gvml96ftrfv2di87hoce@4ax.com>
References : 1 2
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On Fri, 27 Sep 2024 23:50:21 +0800, Sylvia Else <
sylvia@email.invalid>
wrote:
On 27-Sept-24 11:07 pm, john larkin wrote:
Given a benchtop power supply, you can turn the voltage up and then
down, and it goes down. Most have a substantial amount of output
capacitance, and can be driving an external cap too. So something
pulls the output down.
I guess that there are no standards for this, but I've never seen a
supply that just hangs high when it's cranked down.
I'm designing some programmable multi-channel power suplies and that
is one of many tangled issues in the project.
>
Be easy enough to sink current when the output voltage exceeds the set
point by more than, say, 0.1V.
>
But there has to be a limit - connect the PS to your fully charged car
battery, and set the PS to 10V, and you're not going to see a 10V output
any time soon.
>
Sylvia.
Right, the load could be a battery. The user could set the output
voltage high with some current limit to charge the battery (or some
giant capacitor), and then set the voltage low.
What's complicating my life is that the regulator is a half-bridge
switcher that, in that case, becomes a boost converter, pumping
backwards into my bulk power supply, which could then blow up. Or if
the control loop cranks the PWM duty cycle down to zero in a futile
attempt to reduce the output voltage, it soon shorts the battery.
Or some yahoo could connect the battery backwards.
This is actually a nice multidimensional dilemma. I'll be using the
DRV8962 quad half-bridge, which also constrains things.
As usual with data sheets, it isn't entirely clear.