T O P I C R E V I E W |
rahdirs |
Posted - Jun 05 2013 : 12:23:11 AM The source V1 that you see in the schematic is a varying voltage source,it's voltage varies randomly from 3.3 V to 18 V (slowly,no issue of frequency). In the circuit, using the two op-amps & 18 V voltage source i brought the voltage to an almost constant 16-17 V.But the op-amps give small current(25 mA),so i used a power-amplifier to increase current. But what i'm talking about in previous post is that the source V1 is not only a varying voltage source,but it also gives current in-between 4-7 A.I want to bring this current, to the base of the power-amp,so that i can use this current & decrease the current i draw from Vcc.
What i want to do finally,is to bring voltage at the o/p of the 2nd op-amp to 16-17 V which i did & also the current to 4-7 A. I mean,like the way you do in a trans-impedance amplifier(not talking about current to voltage conversion) pass the current through the feedback paths with probe 1&probe 2 through probe 3 to output,can i make current to flow this way ??? Am I making myself clear?????
I mean now if the current were to pass through the paths with probe 1 & probe 2,then because of low-output impedance of op-amp the current flows into the output of the op-amp,rather than going forward.So i'm thinking of increasing op-amp output impedance so that current from the feedback path doesn't flow into it.Is this correct??
Download Attachment: Capture (1).JPG 184.3 KB |
2 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
rahdirs |
Posted - Jun 10 2013 : 02:44:32 AM haha,no i'm using a charge-controller before battery to limit current & to prevent over-charging of battery. But for simulation purposes i'm not using charge-controller & am continuing my simulations. |
audioguru |
Posted - Jun 05 2013 : 9:19:58 PM Are you still trying to make a battery charger with a very high current but with nothing to prevent over-charging? |
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