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Capacitors in Series
Protection from what?........................
I envisage a diode would be need between Transistor and Capacitor for protection?
..............
Protection from what?
You do need some way to limit the current to the capacitor Rated Value (5A).
It is chancey to charge capacitors in series. Can you be certain they start at the same voltage? Can you be certain their values are equal? It will be a good idea to add a resistor network designed to equalize charge on your capacitors.
Hi,
Please show a complete schematic of your idea.
(with all devices like diode...)
And I don´t understand the various current specifications: 5A, 18A, 50A... where and when do they apply?
***
Charging a (big) capacitor with a linear circuit is lossy.
Maybe you should consider a switching circuit.
Klaus
It is chancey to charge capacitors in series. Can you be certain they start at the same voltage? Can you be certain their values are equal? It will be a good idea to add a resistor network designed to equalize charge on your capacitors.
would that mean charging with voltage divider?
Is there an example I could look at?
I didn't yet hear a clear question for balancer techniques in this thread, although term was mentioned en passant.
Smaller supercapacitor batteries like the said 50F size work well with a simple voltage limiting circuit parallel to each cell, like the below shown "Active Balancing" circuit from an Epcos/TDK application note. For higher capacitance, lossless switch mode balancers might be reasonable.
View attachment 137846
I would recommend a DC-DC converter style with an
active current limit that is safe for both itself and the
cap. Most current mode controllers can be made to
deliver a maximum continuous current making it only
a power transistor selection and thermal management
problem.
I believe I have seen chips advertised that will balance
supercapacitor charge, but I can't recall the vendor.
However I do not think this matters, as Q=C*V and
if you are charging to a V endpoint, charge simply
follows (and why would you charge to less than
endpoint V, on one or the other?).
You might find that some lithium-ion battery charge
controller / DC-DC chips offer an elegant and cheap
solution (including cell balancing, dual-mode charge
control (CC->CV) and roughly-right voltage range).
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